Reproductive performance in South Australian dairy herds |
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Authors: | TD WILSON,DM MCLEAN&dagger ,CF SALTER&dagger ,BD BARTSCH&dagger |
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Affiliation: | *TD Wilson (Veterinary Surgeon) Pty Ltd, Saleyard Centre, McLaren Street, Mount Barker, South Australia 5251;†South Australian Research and Development Institute, Flaxley Research Centre, PO Box 1571, Flaxley, South Australia 5153;†Primary Industries (South Australia), Virginia District Office, PO Box 522, Virginia, South Australia 5120 |
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Abstract: | SUMMARY Herd breeding records (161) were examined from a random 10% sample of dairy farms (96) in South Australia with more than 40 cows and suitable breeding records for 1988 and/or 1989. Of these farms, 53 (55.2%) had a year-round calving pattern, 42 (43.8%) claimed to be seasonal and one was changing from a year-round to a seasonal pattern. Only 14.6% of farmers observed oestrous behaviour outside milking times and 18.8% used tailpaint. Overall, the average proportion of unobserved heats was estimated to be 32%. Artificial insemination (AI) was carried out on 85.4% of farms (16.7% used AI alone and 68.7% also used bulls) of which 32.9% used commercial technicians and 67.1% were do-it-yourself operators. Overall, the average 30-day submission rate was 59.9% and the average 49-day non-return to service rate was 58.9%. Investigation into the probable causes of suboptimal reproductive performance gave a tentative diagnosis of inefficient oestrous detection, deferral of service, inadequate nutrition, poor AI technique, insufficient bulls, and venereal/other diseases in 69.1, 32.1, 27.2, 28.4, 13.6 and 7.4% of records, respectively. |
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