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Dairy Management
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I.Trends in milk production A.Top six states for milk production (2011) 1.California 3. Idaho 5. Pennsylvania 2.Wisconsin 4. New York 6. Texas 7. MN
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Trends over the last 20 years. + + + + -
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Concentrations of Dairy Cows 2007 Each dot equals 15000 cows
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B. Dairying in Minnesota 1.Advantages 1. Plentiful water 2. Good Infrastructure 3. Cheaper feed 2.Disadvantages 1. Small farms 2. Housing more expensive 3. Resistance to large farms
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C. Minnesota Dairy Trends Year # Dairy %Farms #cows Milk Total MN Farms milking /cow milk 1945 151,064 91 1,664,000 5,180 8.6 B 1975 33,267 28 884,000 10,120 8.9 1991 14,637 16 673,000 14,162 9.8 1997 10,600 12 595,000 16,320 9.8 2004 5,700 6 463,000 17,499 8.1 2011 4,600 5 468,000 18,996 8.9 Average number of cows per herd = 100 cows in 2011. Average = 116 cows; November 2012
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II. Life cycle of a Dairy Cow A.Calf – Day 1 1.Dip the navel in tincture of iodine solution a. kills bacteria b. shuts down navel 2. Feed colostrum – provides antibodies 3. Give identification 4. Separate from mother – prevents spread of pathogens from mother to calf.
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B.Day 1-30 (average calf weaned at 60 days) 1. feed milk – generally two quarts are fed twice per day. 2. grain mix available 3. fresh water available 4. dehorn Tube dehorner
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Nasco lists 20 different dehorners
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Electric dehorner Butane dehorner Barnes dehorner Dehorning paste
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C.After weaning – feed grain mix and forage
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D. Rumen is developing. 1. Advantages of ruminants a. Cellulose digested b. B vitamin synthesis c. Can utilize non-protein nitrogen
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2. Disadvantages of ruminants a. Digestive upsets if feed is changed rapidly b. Less efficient utilization of high quality feeds c. Need fiber in the diet d. Can be indiscriminate eaters – eating metal can lead to Hardware Disease.
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E. Yearling – 1 year of age – average weight = 700 lbs. 1. typical diet lbs. alfalfa hay 8 - protein and energy corn silage 25 - energy corn grain 1 - energy soybean meal.15 - protein dical – phos.1 - phosphorous TM salt.05 - minerals rumensin 200 mg. – inhibits gram positive bacteria in the rumen. Increases feed efficiency by 10% and decreases methane release.
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2. Puberty is reached at 10 to 14 months. a.estrus cycle is 21 days b.gestation length is 280 days c.general goal is to calve first time at 24 months – means heifer must be pregnant by 15 months of age. How do known that it is time to breed Bessie?
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d. Criteria for sire selection: Net Merit Dollar Value Trait Weighting in Index protein lbs. 16% fat lbs. 19 productive life 22 somatic cell score -10 daughter pregnancy rate 11 udder conformation 7 feet and legs 4 body size -6 calving ability* 4 *(includes weights on calving ease and stillbirths)
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Over 500 progeny tested Holstein dairy bulls available to U.S. dairy producers.
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>88,000 tested daughters in 24 countries as of April 2012. +815 lbs. milk + $673 Net Merit
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F. 2 years of age - weight 1300 lbs. – calving time 1.changes prior to calving a. mammary development b. ligaments over rump loosen c. animals try to find secluded area d. may start to drip milk
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2.Typical diet for a 2 year-old producing 70 lbs. of milk per day ingredient lbs. alfalfa 14 corn silage 23 corn grain 16 SBM 3 Whole cotton seed 6 dical – phos.25 TM salt.22 Vitamin ADE premix.06 selenium premix.01 Total lbs. 62.25 Forage makes up about 50% of the ration dry matter. lbs. as fed
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3. Nutrient composition of above ration Actual NRC requirements lbs. dry matter 42.6 42.6 Mcal/lb..80.80 % protein 16.9 16.9 % ADF 20.4 19.0 % calcium.847.693 % phosphorus.455.455 Vitamin A (I.U.) 4000 2000
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4.Cost of ration: $6.50 5.Feed cost / 100 cwt of milk produced: $6.50 /.70 cwt. = $9.30
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G. Milking Procedure 1. predip teats - cleans 2. massage teats – stimulates milk letdown by release of oxytocin 3. remove two streams of milk – further stimulation and check for abnormal milk 4. wipe teats – use fresh paper or cloth towel for each cow.
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5. put on milking unit 6. remove milking unit after milk flow stops – milking takes about 6 min. 7. dip teats in a sanitizing solution. – decreases new infections by 50%
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H.Lactation Curves milk % fat Feed intake Body weight
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Income 18,000 lbs. milk 650 lbs. fat 575 lbs. protein Value of milk at $22 / cwt. $3960 Value of calf 200 Total $4160
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Expenses Feed cost $6.50 x 365 $2372 Direct costs 400 Indirect costs 600 Total expenses $3372 Return for labor and management: $788
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J. Time to dry off 1.need 30 to 60 day dry period 2.at last milking, dry treat with approved antibiotic infusion 3.preventative medicine a. deworm b. vaccinate: IBR, PI3, BVD, BRSV 5 way Lepto c. trim hooves
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K. 3 yr. old – freshening time again Twins – 1 bull and 1 heifer Twinning in dairy cattle is undesirable. A heifer born twin to a bull is sterile 91% of the time. Anti-Müllerian hormone from the male fetus prevents the female fetus’s reproductive tract from developing. These sterile females are known as free-martins. Twin births can also be difficult for the cows.
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1. Milk fever – hypocalcemia - parturient paresis – low blood calcium. Symptoms: Cows are too weak to stand up. Treatment: Calcium gluconate given intraveniously.
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1. Milk fever – hypocalcemia - parturient paresis – low blood calcium. Symptoms: Cows are too weak to stand up. Treatment: Calcium gluconate given intraveniously. Expect full recovery. Costs $10 for calcium, $80 for vet visit if needed.
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2. Retained Placenta – The placenta is not expelled within 12 hours after parturition. This happens about 90% of twin births. It is best to not treat unless the animal becomes sick – take temperature twice daily. Placenta will dislodge in about a week. Definitely, stressful for the Cow!!.
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Mastitis – bacterial infection of the mammary gland. Milk has flakes in it from elevated white blood cells. Infuse infected quarters with antibiotics for three milkings. Discard milk for 3 days. Costs: $10 plus discarded milk.
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4. Displaced Abomasum The abomasum and omasum belong on the right side. Surgery is used to put things back where they belong. Costs: $150.
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5.Ketosis – low blood sugar causes the cow to have a poor appetite and be depressed. Treatment: drench with glycogen – a carbohydrate for quick energy. Niacin supplementation to help the liver convert fat to blood glucose. Vitamin B 12 injection to increase appetite. Costs: $20
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L.Cow recovers completely and milks up to 120 lbs. of milk a day!!
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M.Reproductive history of second lactation 1. 3 week vet check - some inflammation 2. 6 weeks – first estrus 3. 9 weeks – second estrus – AI bred 4. 15 weeks – return to heat – AI bred 5. 22 weeks – confirmed pregnant
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N. Completes a 24,000 lb. milk record = 2790 gallons of milk ( 1 gallon of milk weights 8.6 lbs.
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O. 4 year old – calves for the third time. 1. udder edema – excessive swelling in the udder which can cause breaking of the attachments.
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