Cow performance, adrenal function, and milk quality under varying levels of competition

Twelve dairy cows were used to determine behavior with varying numbers of free stalls and length of feed trough. A least squares procedure, which regressed for numbers of observations, was adapted for obtaining dominance values. Available free stalls were 1.0, .83, .67, .50, .33 per cow. With 1.0 fr...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Friend, Theodore Henry
Other Authors: Dairy Science
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/38669
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-06222010-020315/
id ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-38669
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-386692021-04-16T05:40:19Z Cow performance, adrenal function, and milk quality under varying levels of competition Friend, Theodore Henry Dairy Science Polan, Carl E. Etgen, William M. Siegel, Paul B. Cragle, R. G. Kenyon, David E. environmental effects on milk production LD5655.V856 1977.F735 Twelve dairy cows were used to determine behavior with varying numbers of free stalls and length of feed trough. A least squares procedure, which regressed for numbers of observations, was adapted for obtaining dominance values. Available free stalls were 1.0, .83, .67, .50, .33 per cow. With 1.0 free stalls, linear feed trough was .5, .4, .3, .2, .1 m per cow changed at 7-day intervals. Cow behavior and locations were quantified by time-lapse photography at I-minute intervals during the last 3-days of each treatment. Spatial recommendations for dairy cattle can be greatly reduced. Behavior was altered only when less than .67 free stalls or .2 m of linear trough was available per cow. Minimum stalls needed per cow without altering daily free stall usage = [14.2 hours (average use)]/[hours per day free stalls are available to the herd X .93 (maximum. efficiency before crowding)]. Linear feed trough of .2 m appears adequate to ensure desired amount of eating time when individuals have access to feed in trough 21 hours per day. Estimated individual dry matter intakes were the same at .5 m and .25 m of trough per cow. Intake was affected by time spent eating for .25 m. In 10-variable models for various levels of competition, time spent eating, or in free stalls, and individual dry matter intake were described predominantly by production variables, not dominance values. Adrenal responsiveness to 200 IU adrenocorticotrophic hormone (ACTH) was determined by quantifying plasma corticosteroids in two groups of lactating Holstein cows. One group of 18 cows received ACTH via jugular catheter 0, 2, or 9 days after introduction to an established group in restricted space (3.96 m2 lot space and .67 free stalls per cow). Differences in total plasma corticoids (area under curve) in response to ACTH were not statistically different although corticoid response 2 and 9 days of stress tended to be greater than day O. A second group of 16 cows received ACTH at 0, 1, 2, or 3 days after introduction to a new group and crowding (2.97 m2 lot space and .5 free stalls per cow). Mean corticoid response to ACTH (area under the curve, ng/ml ± SD) were 161.6 ± 12.6, 158.2 ± 28.2, 227.7 ± 32.2 and 229.9 ± 40.3 for cows inject~d days 0, 1, 2, and 3 respectively, days 2 and 3 differed from day 0 (P<.OS). Bacteriological status of quarter milk samples was not changed by stress. In non-infected quarters of 24 stressed cows, 8 quarters increased above 150,000 somatic cells/ml while 5 quarters decreased below 150,000 cells/m1 of milk after 4 days of stress when compared to 2 and 6 days prior to stress. Stress did not affect milk production relative to controls. Ph. D. 2014-03-14T21:15:12Z 2014-03-14T21:15:12Z 1977-02-15 2010-06-22 2010-06-22 2010-06-22 Dissertation Text etd-06222010-020315 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/38669 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-06222010-020315/ en OCLC# 40244646 LD5655.V856_1977.F735.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ vi, 64 leaves BTD application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic environmental effects on milk production
LD5655.V856 1977.F735
spellingShingle environmental effects on milk production
LD5655.V856 1977.F735
Friend, Theodore Henry
Cow performance, adrenal function, and milk quality under varying levels of competition
description Twelve dairy cows were used to determine behavior with varying numbers of free stalls and length of feed trough. A least squares procedure, which regressed for numbers of observations, was adapted for obtaining dominance values. Available free stalls were 1.0, .83, .67, .50, .33 per cow. With 1.0 free stalls, linear feed trough was .5, .4, .3, .2, .1 m per cow changed at 7-day intervals. Cow behavior and locations were quantified by time-lapse photography at I-minute intervals during the last 3-days of each treatment. Spatial recommendations for dairy cattle can be greatly reduced. Behavior was altered only when less than .67 free stalls or .2 m of linear trough was available per cow. Minimum stalls needed per cow without altering daily free stall usage = [14.2 hours (average use)]/[hours per day free stalls are available to the herd X .93 (maximum. efficiency before crowding)]. Linear feed trough of .2 m appears adequate to ensure desired amount of eating time when individuals have access to feed in trough 21 hours per day. Estimated individual dry matter intakes were the same at .5 m and .25 m of trough per cow. Intake was affected by time spent eating for .25 m. In 10-variable models for various levels of competition, time spent eating, or in free stalls, and individual dry matter intake were described predominantly by production variables, not dominance values. Adrenal responsiveness to 200 IU adrenocorticotrophic hormone (ACTH) was determined by quantifying plasma corticosteroids in two groups of lactating Holstein cows. One group of 18 cows received ACTH via jugular catheter 0, 2, or 9 days after introduction to an established group in restricted space (3.96 m2 lot space and .67 free stalls per cow). Differences in total plasma corticoids (area under curve) in response to ACTH were not statistically different although corticoid response 2 and 9 days of stress tended to be greater than day O. A second group of 16 cows received ACTH at 0, 1, 2, or 3 days after introduction to a new group and crowding (2.97 m2 lot space and .5 free stalls per cow). Mean corticoid response to ACTH (area under the curve, ng/ml ± SD) were 161.6 ± 12.6, 158.2 ± 28.2, 227.7 ± 32.2 and 229.9 ± 40.3 for cows inject~d days 0, 1, 2, and 3 respectively, days 2 and 3 differed from day 0 (P<.OS). Bacteriological status of quarter milk samples was not changed by stress. In non-infected quarters of 24 stressed cows, 8 quarters increased above 150,000 somatic cells/ml while 5 quarters decreased below 150,000 cells/m1 of milk after 4 days of stress when compared to 2 and 6 days prior to stress. Stress did not affect milk production relative to controls. === Ph. D.
author2 Dairy Science
author_facet Dairy Science
Friend, Theodore Henry
author Friend, Theodore Henry
author_sort Friend, Theodore Henry
title Cow performance, adrenal function, and milk quality under varying levels of competition
title_short Cow performance, adrenal function, and milk quality under varying levels of competition
title_full Cow performance, adrenal function, and milk quality under varying levels of competition
title_fullStr Cow performance, adrenal function, and milk quality under varying levels of competition
title_full_unstemmed Cow performance, adrenal function, and milk quality under varying levels of competition
title_sort cow performance, adrenal function, and milk quality under varying levels of competition
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/38669
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-06222010-020315/
work_keys_str_mv AT friendtheodorehenry cowperformanceadrenalfunctionandmilkqualityundervaryinglevelsofcompetition
_version_ 1719396266627039232