Animals (Feb 2023)

Associations of Body Condition Score at Calving, Parity, and Calving Season on the Performance of Dairy Cows and Their Offspring

  • Milaine Poczynek,
  • Larissa de Souza Nogueira,
  • Isabela Fonseca Carrari,
  • Jorge Henrique Carneiro,
  • Rodrigo de Almeida

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ani13040596
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 4
p. 596

Abstract

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This study aimed to evaluate the impact of body condition score (BCS) at calving, parity, and the calving season on the performance of dairy cows and their offspring. Data from 521 Holstein cows that calved a female calf and had their BCS evaluated at calving from a single commercial farm located in Southern Brazil were used. Cows were categorized into five BCS classes: class 1: n = 19), class 2: 3.0–3.25 (n = 134), class 3: 3.5–3.75 (n = 160), class 4: 4.0–4.25 (n = 142), and class 5: >4.25 (n = 66). Data were also categorized by calving order (primiparous and multiparous dams) and by calving season. The study was designed as a prospective cohort study. Variables with normal distribution were analyzed by the MIXED procedure of SAS, while binary outcomes were analyzed by the GLIMMIX procedure of SAS. Daughters from primiparous dams were born lighter (39.1 ± 0.42 vs. 41.4 ± 0.29 kg, p p = 0.20). As expected, primiparous cows showed lower (p p = 0.01). Calves born in the winter were heavier at birth (p p = 0.04), and produced more milk at first lactation (p = 0.03). The BCS class had an impact (p 4.25 (41.9 ± 0.57 kg). Calves from dams with a BCS p = 0.12). These results suggest that maternal and environmental factors, such as calving season and parity, in addition to the dams’ body condition score at calving, are associated with different offspring performances.

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