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AFGC Convention 2004 (1) 2004 Possibilities for Improving Dairy Cattle Performance Dr. H. Duane Norman Animal Improvement Programs Laboratory Agricultural Research Service, USDA Beltsville, MD 20705-2350 dnorman@aipl.arsusda.gov 301-504-8334
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AFGC Convention 2004 (2) 2004 Topics l Does the proposed national animal ID system help genetic programs for dairy cattle? l What genetic programs work well for graziers? 2004
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Benefit of proposed national animal ID system to genetic programs for dairy cattle AFGC Convention 2004 (3) 2004
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AFGC Convention 2004 (4) 2004 Background l BSE in Washington state l Better ID for dairy cattle (traceability) – Council on Dairy Cattle Breeding – National FAIR – Wisconsin ID Consortium l Timetable shortened l Funding sources expanded
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AFGC Convention 2004 (5) 2004 National dairy breeding program l Animal Improvement Programs Laboratory – Dairy cattle ID database – Genetic evaluations l Requirements for success – Parent ID – Birth date – Production recording – Progeny test
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AFGC Convention 2004 (6) 2004 National ID program l USAIP (U.S. Animal Identification Plan) l Monitor and document animal movement l Trace back for health concerns l Enhance genetic programs? – Must include birth date and sire ID – Dam ID can further improve evaluation accuracy
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Genetic improvement issues for graziers AFGC Convention 2004 (7) 2004
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AFGC Convention 2004 (8) 2004 Grazier breeding l Objective – Cattle with better fertility or other desired characteristics l Approaches – Bulls from countries that practice grazing – Bull breed different from cow breed – Effectiveness?
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AFGC Convention 2004 (9) 2004 U.S. daughters of New Zealand bulls l Daughter performance compared within herd – New Zealand AI Holstein bulls – Other AI Holstein bulls (predominantly U.S.) l Cows included – Records in AIPL national database – Calved before March 2004 – Time to express the performance traits
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AFGC Convention 2004 (10) 2004 U.S. daughters of New Zealand bulls l Data continued l 145 herds l 452 New Zealand daughters l 4,954 U.S. daughters l 110 herds l 283 New Zealand daughters l 4,141 U.S. daughters l 72 herds l 145 New Zealand daughters l 2,372 U.S. daughters – First lactation – Second lactation – Third lactation
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AFGC Convention 2004 (11) 2004 U.S. daughters of New Zealand bulls l Yield continued l U.S. daughters superior First lactation 1046 lb*** Second lactation 1108 lb*** Third lactation 1049 lb*** l New Zealand daughters superior First lactation 4 lb Second lactation 2 lb l U.S. daughters superior Third lactation 1 lb l U.S. daughters superior First lactation 10 lb** Second lactation 12 lb** Third lactation 13 lb – Milk – Fat – Protein
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AFGC Convention 2004 (12) 2004 U.S. daughters of New Zealand bulls l Value of U.S. daughter yield superiority at current milk prices – First lactation – Second lactation – Third lactation continued l $30.35 l $38.30 l $43.79
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AFGC Convention 2004 (13) 2004 U.S. daughters of New Zealand bulls l Somatic cell score continued l U.S. daughters superior .2*** l U.S. daughters superior .1 l New Zealand daughters superior .1 – First lactation – Second lactation – Third lactation
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AFGC Convention 2004 (14) 2004 U.S. daughters of New Zealand bulls l Days open continued l New Zealand daughters superior 7 days* l New Zealand daughters superior 8 days l New Zealand daughters superior 4 days – First lactation – Second lactation – Third lactation – Pheno- typic trend 1 2 3 4 5 Lactation
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AFGC Convention 2004 (15) 2004 U.S. daughters of New Zealand bulls l Productive life – Comparison needed – Advantage for New Zealand daughters? continued
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AFGC Convention 2004 (16) 2004 Crossbreeding l Heterosis – Milk 3.4 – Fat 4.4 – Protein 4.1 – SCS-0.7 – Days Open 1.8 continued
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AFGC Convention 2004 (17) 2004 Recommendations l Don’t select bulls solely on reproductive performance or any other single trait because several traits also have economic value l If you practice seasonal calving, use an index with more weight on daughter pregnancy rate than is recommended for the general U.S. dairy cattle industry
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If a national animal ID system is to enhance genetic programs for dairy cattle, the critical development issue is to obtain sire information! AFGC Convention 2004 (18) 2004
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