Environmental and genetic effects on claw disorders in Finnish dairy cattle

Similar documents
Registration system in Scandinavian countries - Focus on health and fertility traits. Red Holstein Chairman Karoline Holst

Genetic and Genomic Evaluation of Claw Health Traits in Spanish Dairy Cattle N. Charfeddine 1, I. Yánez 2 & M. A. Pérez-Cabal 2

Genetic Achievements of Claw Health by Breeding

Comparison of different methods to validate a dataset with producer-recorded health events

Health traits and their role for sustainability improvement of dairy production

Claw Health Data Recording in Spanish Dairy Cattle

Lameness Information and Evaluation Factsheet

N. Charfeddine 1 and M.A. Pérez-Cabal 2. Dpto. Técnico CONAFE, Ctra. de Andalucía, Km. 23, Madrid, Spain 2

* Department of Population Medicine, University of Guelph, Animal Welfare Program,

Cattle Foot Care And Lameness control

Objectives. Lameness in cattle. Herd management of musculoskeletal disorders in. Common musculoskeletal problems. Diseases of the hoof horn

Genetic and phenotypic analyses of claw traits in dairy cattle

Trigger Factors for Lameness and the Dual Role of Cow Comfort in Herd Lameness Dynamics

Nordic Cattle Genetic Evaluation a tool for practical breeding with red breeds

Nigel B. Cook MRCVS Clinical Associate Professor in Food Animal Production Medicine University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Veterinary Medicine

Claw Health Data recording in Spanish dairy cattle

Lameness and Hoof Health

Long and short term strategies to improve claw health and to reduce lameness

Proceedings of the 16th International Symposium & 8th Conference on Lameness in Ruminants

SOP - Claws. SOP - Claws describe working routines that are important to secure claw health and minimize spread af infection between animals.

LOCOMOTION SCORING OF DAIRY CATTLE DC - 300

Breeding for health using producer recorded data in Canadian Holsteins

Evaluate Environment (page 7-8)

THE CHARACTERISTICS OF LAMENESS IN DAIRY COWS

Genetic Relationships between Milk Yield, Somatic Cell Count, Mastitis, Milkability and Leakage in Finnish Dairy Cattle Population

Genetic and Genomic Evaluation of Mastitis Resistance in Canada

Guidelines for selecting good feet and structure. Dr Sarel Van Amstel Department of Large Animal Clinical Sciences College of Veterinary Medicine

LAMENESS IN DAIRY CATTLE. G. L. Stokka, J. F. Smith, J. R. Dunham, and T. Van Anne

Health traits and their role for sustainability improvement of dairy production

First national recording of health traits in dairy cows in the Czech Republic

HOOF MEASUREMENTS RELATED TO LOCOMOTION SCORES AND CLAW DISORDERS IN DAIRY PRIMIPAROUS COWS

Genetic parameters for pathogen specific clinical mastitis in Norwegian Red cows

A New Index for Mastitis Resistance

Københavns Universitet

The Effect of Lameness on Milk Production in Dairy Cows

Estimates of Genetic Parameters and Environmental Effects of Hunting Performance in Finnish Hounds 1

Proceedings of the 16th International Symposium & 8th Conference on Lameness in Ruminants

Somatic Cell Count as an Indicator of Subclinical Mastitis. Genetic Parameters and Correlations with Clinical Mastitis

Lameness Treatment and Prevention: No Pain, No Lame

Lameness Treatment and Prevention: No Pain, No Lame

Herd health challenges in high yielding dairy cow systems

Dealing with dairy cow lameness applying knowledge on farm

Impact of Flooring on Claw Health and Lameness

Prevalence of subclinical mastitis in Finnish dairy cows: changes during recent decades and impact of cow and herd factors

Rearing heifers to calve at 24 months

Index for Mastitis Resistance and Use of BHBA for Evaluation of Health Traits in Canadian Holsteins

HOW CAN TRACEABILITY SYSTEMS INFLUENCE MODERN ANIMAL BREEDING AND FARM MANAGEMENT?

Prevalence and distribution of foot lesions in dairy cattle in Alberta, Canada

Development of a Breeding Value for Mastitis Based on SCS-Results

Milking behaviour in dairy cows naturally infected with clinical mastitis

Estimation of probability for the presence of claw and hoof diseases by combing cow- and herd-level information using a Bayesian network

Foot Health - A Foundation of Animal Care. Karl Burgi Dairyland Hoof Care Institute, Inc Baraboo WI

Technical. Preventing lameness in dairy cows: Hoof lesions; their identification, treatment, management and prevention. N 5 9 9

Evaluation of intervention strategies for subclinical and clinical mastitis

INDEX. Note: Page numbers of article titles are in boldface type. LAMENESS

What the Research Shows about the Use of Rubber Floors for Cows

THIS ARTICLE IS SPONSORED BY THE MINNESOTA DAIRY HEALTH CONFERENCE.

a functional trait in dairy cows

Validation of the Nordic disease databases

New York State Cattle Health Assurance Program Fact Sheet Udder Health Herd Goals

Herd-level risk factors for seven different foot lesions in Ontario Holstein cattle housed in tie stalls or free stalls

De Tolakker Organic dairy farm at the Faculty of Veterinary Medicine in Utrecht, The Netherlands

A Few Economic and Management Considerations for Dairy Heifers

The mastitis situation in Canada where do you stand?

MASTITIS CASE MANAGEMENT

Date of Change. Nature of Change

NYSCHAP BASELINE SURVEY Cover Page

Mastitis Reminders and Resources LAURA SIEGLE EXTENSION AGENT VIRGINIA COOPERATIVE EXTENSION AMELIA COUNTY

Lameness Control in Dairy Herds

Genetic parameters of number of piglets nursed

SOP biosecurity describes the work procedures that are important to secure a high level of biosecurity.

Investigating herds with lameness problems. Charles Guard, DVM, PhD

COW WELFARE ASSESSEMENT TIE STALL SCORING (COMPILATION)

Reduced test-day milk fat percentage in cows diagnosed with claw horn lesions during routine claw trimming

Presentation of Danish system of registration and use of health data (registration, database, data security, herd health contracts, )

Risk Factors of Seven Groups of Health Disorders in Iranian Holstein Cows

Presentation of Danish system of registration and use of health data (registration, database, data security, herd health contracts, )

Dairy Herdsman Certificate

Cattle lameness: a problem of cows that starts in heifers

Decreasing Lameness and Increasing Cow Comfort on Alberta Dairy Farms

JAN OLECHNOWICZ AND JĘDRZEJ M. JAŚKOWSKI. Abstract. Key words: dairy cow, lameness, milk yield, milk composition. Material and Methods

FAIL. Animal Welfare vs Sustainability. 8,776 cows in 67 UK herds. Mean lameness prevalence of 39.1%!!!!!!

RELATIONSHIPS AMONG WEIGHTS AND CALVING PERFORMANCE OF HEIFERS IN A HERD OF UNSELECTED CATTLE

Herd Health Plan. Contact Information. Date Created: Date(s) Reviewed/Updated: Initials: Date: Initials: Date: Farm Manager: Veterinarian of Record:

GENETIC SELECTION FOR MILK QUALITY WHERE ARE WE? David Erf Dairy Technical Services Geneticist Zoetis

Impact of FMD on milk yield, mastitis, fertility and culling on a large-scale dairy farm in Kenya

Intra-class correlation attributable to claw-trimmers scoring common hind claw disorders in Dutch dairy herds

use of claw health data

Genetic Variability of Alternative Somatic Cell Count Traits and their Relationship with Clinical and Subclinical Mastitis

Close window to return to IVIS

Last 2-3 months of lactation

2013 State FFA Dairy Judging Contest

ARE YOU RUNNING YOUR HOOF BATH PROPERLY?

Charmany Dairy Herd Newsletter April 1 st April 7 th Daily Events

Progress of type harmonisation

proaction in Ontario Created by Drs. Steven Roche & Kelly Barratt

Northern NY Agricultural Development Program 2016 Project Report

Foot lesions in lame cows on 10 dairy farms in Ireland

Transcription:

Environmental and genetic effects on claw disorders in Finnish dairy cattle Anna-Elisa Liinamo, Minna Laakso and Matti Ojala Department of Animal Science, University of Helsinki

Aims Study various effects associated with claw disorders Breed, parity Lactation stage, 305-d milk production Claw trimming season and frequency Feeding, barn, bedding and manure removal system type Herd size Herd and claw trimmer effects Estimate genetic parameters of claw disorders

Data Collected in Terveet Sorkat (=healthy claws) programme Joint nationwide programme to improve claw health in Finnish dairy farms, funded mainly by feed industry This study included data collected in 2003-2004 Participation in the programme is voluntary for farms Data covered 10% of all dairy cows and 15% of all milk recorded dairy cows in Finland in the period 74 410 observations from 41 087 dairy cows and heifers 1 462 different herds Collected by 43 claw trimmers Three breeds: Ayrshire (71%), Finncattle (1%), Holstein- Friesian (28%)

Studied traits Sole hemorrhage White line disease Screw claw (> 90º) Heel erosion All claw disorders combined Above plus (inter)digital dermatitis, chronic laminitis and sole ulcer + other unspecified claw disorders Disorder status classified by claw trimmer as yes/no Affected leg not specified, animal considered as affected if some disorder diagnosed in any leg Studied traits: prevalence in original data > 5%

Prevalences Disorder Sole hemorrhage White line disease Screw claw Heel erosion Sole ulcer Chronic laminitis Digital dermatitis Interdigital dermatitis Other claw disorder Any claw disorder % of observations (n = 74 410) 28.2 10.6 9.2 8.1 3.5 1.7 0.9 0.2 0.8 45.2 % of animals (n = 41 087) 30.0 9.0 10.0 7.8 3.7 1.4 0.6 0.1 0.7 45.8

Methods Effects on claw disorders: Fixed effects model, LS-analyses, F-test Breed + parity + lactation stage + 305-d milk production + herd size + feeding type + barn type + bedding type + manure removal system type + claw trimming season + claw trimming frequency + claw trimmer Genetic parameters of claw disorders: Mixed animal model with repeated observations, REML Fixed effects breed, parity, lactation stage, trimming season, trimming year and claw trimmer identity Random effects herd, (permanent environment), (trimmer), animal and residual

Effects (1) Breed: *** on all studied disorders except heel erosion Highest prevalence in Holstein-Friesian, least in Finncattle Parity: *** on all studied disorders Increased prevalence of claw disorders with increased parities except for screw claws (<- culling) Lactation stage: *** on sole hemorrhages, screw claws and combined claw disorders Highest prevalence 60-180 days after calving: caused by subclinical laminitis in early lactation? 305-d milk production level: *** on all studied disorders except white line disease Higher milk production level -> higher prevalence of claw disorders (except screw claws)

Effects (2) Herd size: *** on sole hemorrhages, heel erosions and screw claws Larger herds (>40 cows) had more heel erosions (infectious) but less sole hemorrhages Feeding type: *** on all disorders except sole hemorrhages Highest prevalences on cows fed with mixed ration feeding, i.e., usually the largest herds

Effects (3) Barn type: *** on all disorders Prevalences much higher in (warm) free-stall barns compared to tie-stall barns Bedding type: *** on all disorders Higher prevalences on hard surfaces Manure removal system type: *** on heel erosions, screw claws and combined claw disorders Higher prevalences on dry manure systems

Effects (4) Claw trimming season: *** on all disorders Heel erosion and sole hemorrhage prevalence highest in winter, white line disease in autumn Claw trimming frequency: *** on all disorders except sole hemorrhages Lowest prevalence when trimmed twice per year Claw trimmer: *** on all disorders 36 out of the 43 claw trimmers had been specially trained to evaluate disorders for the claw health programme However, large differences remained in scoring between individual claw trimmers

Random effects c 2 herd c 2 trimmer h 2 bin h 2 t r Sole hemorrhages 0.04 0.10 0.05 0.09 0.11 ±0.004 White line disease 0.06 0.05 0.04 0.12 0.19 ±0.004 Screw claw 0.09 0.07 0.05 0.15 0.30 ±0.004 Heel erosion 0.22 0.07 0.01 0.03 0.05 ±0.002 Combined claw 0.09 0.09 0.06 0.09 0.17 disorders ±0.005

Discussion (1) Almost 50% of cows had some claw disorder still less than in many other countries (esp. infectious disorders) Largest influence on claw disorder prevalence: Breed (higher prevalences for larger breeds) Lactation stage (highest prevalences right after peak lactation) Parity (higher prevalences for older cows) Barn type (higher prevalences in free-stall barns) Herd environment Claw trimmer = evaluator

Discussion (2) Difficult to improve claw health by breeding: low heritabilities Esp. heel erosion = infectious disorder with 22% of phenotypic variance explained by herd effect Genetic correlations low to moderate between different claw disorders: largely different genetic backgrounds Genetic and phenotypic correlations between claw disorders and 305-d milk yield non-existent

Thank you! Any questions?