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Impact of lameness on milk yield in dairy cows in Austria – results from the Efficient-Cow-project

By February 15, 2021June 9th, 2021No Comments

Document type : Scientific article (in German, only the abstract is translated into English and French) published in Schweiz Arch Tierheilkd

Authors: J Kofler, B Fürst-Waltl , M Dourakas, F Steininger, C Egger-Danner

Preview: The impact of lameness on milk yield in dairy cows has been investigated already in many countries by several authors, taking into consideration almost exclusively locomotion scores ≥ 3. The aim of this study was to evaluate the impact of lameness and of the various lameness scores (2-5) on milk yield and milk solids in cows of the three most important dairy cattle breeds (Fleckvieh, Braunvieh, Holstein-Friesian) in Austria within one lactation period. Material and methods Locomotion scoring of dairy cows was performed by trained personnel every 30-40 days in 2014 during the course of routine performance testing. From the recorded locomotion scores (1-5) and the number of lameness episodes, the cows were classified into five lactation-locomotion-score-groups (LLS-G1-5). In total, data sets of 4005 cows from 144 dairy farms across Austria could be evaluated. Using two statistical models the fixed effects on LLS group, breed (evaluation across all breeds in model 1), farm, year and season of calving, parity and the "continuous effect" number of milking days were included in the analyses of milk, fat and protein yield. Results The mean, cumulative lameness prevalence during the observation period was 51.0%, and 8.1% were cows from the LLS-G5 group showing repeated and severe locomotion scores. During the first 100 days in milk 34.7% of all cows were lame. In model 1, all effects considered had a significant impact.

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