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Calf-ETERIA Using CALF health and productivity as a template for an Evaluation of Translation and Extension of Research Information for Agriculture
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What is Calf-ETERIA ? A University of Guelph-OMAFRA Knowledge Translation and Transfer funded project. Team Members: Ken Leslie – Project Coordinator Tom Wright – Project Co-Coordinator Vivianne Bielmann – Project Manager Trevor DeVries Mario Mongeon Brian Lang Bill Grexton Harold House Betty Summerhayes Ian Rumbles
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Project Objectives Benchmark current dairy calf and heifer management practices Develop approaches to undertaking KTT initiatives to improve awareness and encourage adoption of, known optimal management techniques to increase economic performance and health Evaluate and quantify both the animal health and economic performance subsequent to their initial benchmark Disseminate case-study based benefits of optimal management systems to demonstrate both financial and animal health improvements to all Ontario dairy producers through producer meetings and web-based media
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Benefits Ontario dairy producers from two key perspectives: Economically – through reduced costs attributed to death losses, animal morbidity and associated treatment costs and reduction in compromised lifetime milk production losses, as a result of health problems encountered as a calf Improved welfare of dairy calves and heifers - through increased survival rates and improved health-status Expected Benefits and Impacts
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Ontario Calf and Heifer Management Survey 3,145 surveys were mailed out to dairy producers on DHI The survey was also available online 921 surveys were completed and returned by mail 43 surveys were completed online 30% response
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Status of Survey
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Distribution of Herd Size Herd SizeNumber of Farms 0 – 50 cows445 51 – 100 cows319 101 – 150 cows89 151 – 200 cows27 201 – 250 cows19 251 – 350 cows14 400+ cows7
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The Newborn Calf and Colostrum Management
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Presentation Overview Newborn calf Who is looking after calf care? Separation Calving assistance Treatments Vitamins, Selenium, Iron Oral antibodies Navel Dipping Colostrum feeding and management Collection Storage Quality Feeding
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Calf Care – Survey Results WhoFrequency Owner352 Spouse86 Owner/Spouse66 Family Member90 Employee24 Multiple Individuals (combination of 2 or more of the above) 330 **N=948** **51.6% male, 21.5% female, 26.9% both**
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Separation of Calf from Dam – Survey Results Time from calving to separation Morning (N=929) Afternoon (N=924) Evening (N=925) Night (N=920) 0-2 hrs after calving46%35%40%11% 2-6 hrs after calving25%37%19%35% 6-12 hrs after calving16%13%24%36% Greater than 12 hrs after calving 13%15%17%18%
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Separation Technique – Survey Results Total Separation to Calf Housing 758 (81%) Partial Separation using a tub or gate 98 (10%) Other + Partial or Total separation 17 (2%) Other 67 (7%) Methods Used: Moved to box stall/calf pens Tied to corner of calving pen Cow is removed from pen Tied up alongside cows Calf stays with cow for hours/until licked dry/up to 3 days
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Calving Assistance – Survey Results On average, how often was assistance required during a calving, in the past year? Never 0.4% Less than 10% 27% 10 – 20% 41% More than 20% of calvings 23.6% Exact percentage 7.4% Range: 1% - 98%
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Dystocia Calf Minimize dystocia Use appropriate delivery methods Identify compromised calves Administer fluids and oxygen to calves with acidosis Warm chilled calves Deliver high-quality colostrum immediately after birth Treat every dystocia calf as a compromised calf
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Dystocia Calf 48-hour survival rates drop drastically for calves when deliveries require two or more persons, mechanical or surgical intervention compared to unassisted births. There is a 120-day survival rate for calves when deliveries require two or more persons. Mechanical or surgical interventions are 70% less than unassisted births. Treatment rates are higher for dystocia calves (scours 17%, pneumonia 70%) compared to calves experiencing unassisted births. Providing special care, both in the first few hours and first two weeks, can cut both death losses and treatments for scours and/or pneumonia. (Sam Leadley)
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Disinfecting Navels – Survey Results Is it routine practice to disinfect the navel of each newborn calf? Survey results: YES 38% NO 62% http://www.progressivedairy.com/features/2007/0107/0107
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Disinfecting Navels Why do it? Prevent infections – stop pathogens from going up the cord into the calf’s body Navel infections can lead to other health problems Some studies show decreased growth associated with navel infections An easy, cost-effective method to help prevent disease ($0.30 per calf)
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Navel Dipping Costs: Navel dip. The recommended dip is 7 percent tincture of iodine solution. This is a brown, alcohol solution that both dries the tissue and kills germs. Assuming about 50 ml (1.7 ounces) of dip is used for each calf, then the cost per calf is about $0.30. That comes to about $14 per 100 cows. Labor for dipping – Assuming $10/hour and 5 minutes to dip each calf, then the cost per calf is about $0.83. That comes to about $38 per 100 cows. Total cost per 100 cows = $52 If a heifer calf is worth $500, then profit is $2,492 per 100 cows (Sam Leadley 2011)
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Products administered shortly after Birth – Survey Results Treatment None490 (51.5%) Vitamin E/Selenium218 (23%) Vitamins A, D and E97 (10%) Oral Antibody or vaccine277 (29%) Iron26 (3%) Intranasal Viral Vaccine3 (0.3%) More than one of the above152 (16%) **N=950 N.B. – Percentages do not add up to 100%
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Vitamins Vitamins A, D and E should be received in their feed Milk replacers should contain all fat and water- soluble vitamins Deficiency is rare
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Selenium in the Ruminant Trace mineral required by all animals Selenium Deficiency- White Muscle Disease Mastitis and Bulk Tank SCC Reproductive Health Diarrhea Growth
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Selenium 1980’s and 1990’s supplementing newborn calves with selenium and vitamin E injections was common practice Still widely done in beef cow-calf operations, Recent research from the University of Guelph showed calves supplemented with selenium and vitamin E injections were less likely to develop diarrhea from viral pathogens (i.e. rotavirus)
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Selenium - NRC Dairy Cattle 2001 All classes of dairy cattle require 0.3 mg Se/kg DM (0.3 ppm) On a daily basis: Dry cows require ~3 mg of Se Lactating Cows require ~6mg of Se Current FDA and CFIA regulations limit the inclusion of Se supplements to 0.3 mg/kg of the diet. These recommendations are ~16 times lower than the lowest dietary level that has been related to chronic toxicity
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Selenium Deficient Soil
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Distribution of Whole Blood Selenium Levels in Ontario Dairy Calves in the First Week of Life (N=854)
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Distribution of Whole Blood Selenium Levels in Newborn Dairy calves in Ontario Relative to the Standard Reference
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Distribution of serum selenium concentrations for calves 1-7 days old injected with placebo
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Distribution of serum selenium concentrations for calves 1-7 days old injected with Dystosel
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Bio-X ® - fecal test results for Cryptosporidium parvum and Rotavirus PlaceboDystoselTotal Crypto -194202396 Crypto +138 (41.6%)130 (39.2%)268 332 664 PlaceboDystoselTotal Rota -291305596 Rota +41 (12.3%)27 (8.1%)68 332 664 p = 0.074 p =0.527
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Summary Dystosel injection at birth significantly increases serum selenium concentrations during first week of life Unlikely to have an effect on passive transfer or Crypto May have a beneficial effect on Rotavirus Does not appear to affect average daily gain
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Colostrum What has and has not changed…
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The Neonatal Calf Hypogammaglobulinemic 3% body fat No fat soluble vitamins Rumen is nonfunctional Cotyledonary, synepitheliochorial
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Colostrum Source of: Immunoglobulins (IgG) Energy Protein Vitamins/minerals Bioactive peptides Maternal cells Potential pathogens
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Passive Transfer > 10 mg/mL of IgG at 24h after birth www.altagenetics.com
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Factors Affecting Passive Transfer Colostral IgG concentration Amount of colostrum fed Time of feeding Seasonal effects Dystocia Sex of the calf Respiratory acidosis
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Consequences of Not Achieving Passive Transfer Increased risk of morbidity Increased risk of calfhood diarrhea Increased risk of respiratory problems Increased risk mortality Colostrum-deprived calves 50-74 times more likely to die before 3 weeks of age Negative effects on future health, longevity and production parameters (Davis & Drakley, 1998)
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Why does it matter? Lynsay Henderson
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Passive transfer over the years 1992200420082009 StudyNAHMSTrotz-Williams et al.Univ. of GuelphBeam et al. CountryUSACanada USA FPT> 40%39.8%20%19%
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Recent research on passive transfer in ON STP of the population of calves STP by Farm
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How much colostrum to feed? Quantity: 4 L (10-12% of body weight), by esophageal feeder if necessary
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Amount of Colostrum Fed – Survey Results
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Differences in Volume of Colostrum Fed – Survey Results Weight 132 Calf’s Health Status 215 Sex of Calf 19 Let calf drink ‘at will’ 7 Combination of 2 or more of the above 115
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Feeding Clean Colostrum Quickly Quickness: Within 4 hours of birth, max of 6 hrs Decreased absorption of IgG in the gut
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Clean Colostrum Cleanliness: Properly prep the udder and sanitize milking, storage & feeding equipment Feed right away or refrigerated/frozen within 1hr. Unpasteurized colostrum should only be stored for 2 days in a refrigerator Frozen colostrum can be kept for 1 year
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Nation-wide evaluation of quality and composition of colostrum fed to dairy calves in the U.S.A. Kimberley Morrill, PhD Slides provided by Kimberly Morrill Iowa State University
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Objectives Evaluate maternal colostrum available on U.S. farms IgG, bacterial contamination and nutrient composition Compare composition across breeds, lactation, storage method and pooling
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Nutrient and Bacterial Means by Breed and Lactation Nutrient and Bacterial Means by Breed and Lactation BreedLactation HolsteinJerseySE123 IgG (mg/ml)74.1665.778.3342.39 a 68.57 b 95.87 c 9.3 Fat (%)5.335.250.506.55 a 4.2 c 5.14 b 0.53 Protein (%)12.4712.590.6712.3512.0913.140.73 Lactose (%)2.972.930.102.99 ab 2.78 a 3.08 b 0.10 Other Solids (%)4.444.400.084.43 a 4.24 b 4.59 a 0.08 Total Solids (%)22.1522.980.9023.46 a 20.83 b 23.40 a 0.99 SCC (*1,000)2816.72 a 1256.24 b 510.003875.52 a 1408.24 b 825.68 b 587.03 SCC Log5.89 a 5.33 b 0.135.99 a 5.59 b 5.26 c 0.15 Coliform Log1.53 a 1.16 b 0.141.24 b 1.54 a 1.26 b 0.13 TPC Log4.88 a 4.11 b 0.144.49 ab 4.70 a 4.31 b 0.14 Abc Difference between means of each group are indicated by different alphabetical superscripts (P < 0.05)
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Nutrient and Bacterial Means by Storage Method Stored freshfridgefrozenSE IgG (mg/ml)69.0474.5566.317.34 Fat (%)4.885.375.640.47 Protein (%)10.92 c 14.1 a 12.55 b 0.64 Lactose (%)3.18 a 2.75 b 2.92 b 0.09 Other Solids (%)4.56 a 4.31 b 4.38 b 0.07 Total Solids (%)21.21 b 24.16 a 22.33 b 0.87 MUN22.99 c 34.02 a 28.53 b 2.06 SCC Log5.79 a 5.46 b 5.58 a 0.13 Coliform Log1.12 b 1.57 a 1.34 a 0.13 TPC Log3.97 c 4.99 a 4.54 b 0.13 Abc Difference between means of each group are indicated by different alphabetical superscripts (P < 0.05)
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Nutrient and Bacterial Means of Individual and Pooled Samples Pooled NOYESSE n = 734n = 93 IgG (mg/ml)69.65 b 60.25 a 3.64 Fat (%)5.736.130.57 Protein (%)13.21 b 10.93 a 0.60 Lactose (%)2.862.940.09 Other Solids (%)4.354.550.09 Total Solids (%)23.24 b 21.04 a 1.05 SCC (*1,000)2151.72864.62640.04 SCC Log5.74 a 6.19 b 0.16 TPC Log4.92 a 5.45 b 0.11 Coliform Log 1.3 a 1.98 b 0.09 ab Differences between means are indicated by different alphabetical superscripts (P < 0.05)
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Distribution of IgG Concentration Mean = 68.84 mg/ml (SD = 32.77)
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How Are We Doing at Feeding Quality Colostrum? Percentage of samples with above and below industry recommended adequate IgG concentration IgG (mg/ml)Samples(%) <5024329.38 50 - 8030336.64 80 - 10015618.86 100 - 120759.07 >120506.05 Total827100 Percentage of samples with above and below industry recommended total plate count Samples(%) Range (CFU/ml) < 100,00042753.8 100,000 - 300,00010012.6 300,000 - 500,000486.0 500,00 - 1,000,0008510.7 >1,000,00013416.9 Total794100 IgG > 50 mg/mlTPC < 100,000 CFU/ml
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Percentage of Samples Distributed Across Adequate IgG Concentrations and Total Plate Count QualitySamples(%) > 50 IgG and < 100,000 TPC29439.41 > 50 IgG and > 100,000 TPC23331.23 100,000 TPC10413.94 < 50 IgG and < 100,000 TPC11515.42 Total746100
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Conclusions IgG concentration Greater in individual vs pooled samples No difference across breed or storage method Bacterial content Greatest in 1 st lactation, refrigerated and pooled samples Less than 40% of MC available on U.S. dairies meets both industry recommendations for quality measurements
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Colostrum Quality Quality: Quality decreases quickly after calving. Collection should occur within 1 to 2 hours, max of 6 hrs. The relationship between IgG concentrations and volume of colostrum is unpredictable. Avoid feeding Johne’s positive or suspect, as well as visibly mastitic, discoloured, bloody or watery colostrum.
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Assessing Colostrum Quality Currently the Colostrometer TM is the most commonly used instrument on-farm to evaluate colostrum quality Radial Immunodiffusion assay (RID) is the most commonly used method of evaluating the IgG content of colostrum Lab method, takes time Expensive - ~$10/samples Brix Refractometer is a potentially useful tool for on- farm monitoring of colostrum quality. Brix refractometer is not temperature dependent Watch a youtube video about the Brix refractometer: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OjuKlg8224o&list=UUCvrARC kEqyUtYzMdfifySA&index=48&feature=plcp
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Colostrum Quality – Survey Results How many producers are checking colostrum quality? 281/931 30% How are they checking it? Colour and/or consistency 72% (265/370) Volume 19% (70/370) Colostrometer 6% (23/370) Refractometer 0.2% (1/370) Laboratory 3% (11/370)
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Upcoming/New Laboratory Methods for Rapid Determination of Colostral IgG Concentration and Colostral IgG Absorption in the Neonate
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Measuring Colostral IgG In the lab, current methods are: Radial immunodiffusion assay 18 – 24 h incubation time Past the time of gut closure Expensive ($10/sample) Limited availability to producers ELISA 3 - 4 h incubation time Limited availability to producers
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Quick-Test for Rapid Colostral IgG Analysis with a Refractometer Simplifying the protocol and altering the acid concentrations of CA and acetic acid led to a strong relationship between refractive index (nD) and actual IgG concentration r = 0.96
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On-Farm Evaluation of Two Rapid Methods to Estimate IgG Concentration in Bovine Maternal Colostrum Caprylic acid quick-test Binds all non-IgG proteins which causes separation of the colostrum into 2 layers 1 clear layer that only contains IgG 1 layer containing all other substances Goal is to be able to measure IgG layer with a refractometer Whole colostrum refractive index Use a drop of colostrum on a digital refractometer to measure IgG content
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Diagnostics Test Characteristics Breed comparisons Whole MC provides best results No breed differences Parity results Whole MC provides best results No parity differences Storage method Fresh colostrum run through the CA Quick-test provides the greatest combination of characteristics
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Conclusions The caprylic acid Quick-test is a rapid and accurate method to determine MC quality on fresh samples Relationship between nD * RID for both CA quick-test and whole refractometry is greatest for fresh samples Huge opportunities to improve calf and heifer management and profitability
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Thawing Colostrum How? Use a warm water bath to thaw frozen colostrum with water no hotter than 50°C Microwave – possible if done correctly – at low power for short periods of time Do not want to damage the Ig in the colostrum by thawing the colostrum at too high a temperature/power or using very hot water
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Thawing Colostrum New equipment/techniques Colo-Quick Quick thawing of frozen colostrum Collect colostrum into bags, put into plastic container and freeze until use at a later time. Thaw colostrum in water bath and feed to calf
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For more information: http://www.goldencalfcompany.com/Golden_Calf_Company/ColoQuic k.html
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Take Home Messages Selenium may be beneficial effect in protecting the calf from Rotavirus Navel dipping An easy, cost-effective method for preventing infections Colostrum – quality Measuring colostrum quality is easy and worthwhile
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QUESTIONS ?
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