Cow comfort and lameness on British Columbia dairy farms
Transcription
Cow comfort and lameness on British Columbia dairy farms
Cow comfort and lameness on British Columbia dairy farms K. Ito, A. Barrientos, M.A.G. von Keyserlingk, D.M. Weary Cow comfort plays an important role in the prevention of lameness. The first step in exploring this relationship is to determine the current status of cow comfort and lameness on commercial dairy farms in British Columbia. To do this, we recorded the lying time and locomotion score (1 = sound to 5 = severely lame) of 2033 high producing cows from 43 farms (>70 milking cows, freestall housing, TMR/PMR). How many cows are lame? 80 13 70 12 11 10 9 8 25 Proportion of cows (%) 14 Proportion of lame cows (%) Lying time (h/d) How long do cows lie down? 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 7 Farm 12:56 Highest 11:23 11:04 Average 9:28 (hr:min) Lowest 4 Lowest 17 29 Average sound lame 20 15 10 5 0 4 Farm 10:38 Does lameness relate to lying time? 35 71 (%) Highest 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 Lying time (h/d) If a cow has a very high (>14 h/d) or low (<9 h/ d) lying time, she is more likely to be lame! Designing and managing housing with cow comfort in mind can reduce the risk of lameness. Many farms in BC achieved remarkable success in both cow comfort and lameness prevention. Funding was provided by: Westgen Endowement Fund, Investment Agriculture Foundation of BC, Artex Barn Solutions Ltd., Clearbrook Grain and Milling Co. Ltd., Nutritech Solutions Ltd., Ritchie-Smith Feeds Inc., and Unifeed.