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Milking frequency affects the circadian body temperature rhythm in dairy cows
Authors:PE Kendall  CB Tucker  DE Dalley  DA Clark  JR Webster
Institution:aAnimal Behaviour and Welfare, AgResearch Limited, Ruakura Research Centre, Private Bag 3123, Hamilton, New Zealand;bDepartment of Animal Science, University of California, 1 Shields Avenue, Davis, CA 95616, USA;cDexcel Limited, Private Bag 3221, Hamilton, New Zealand
Abstract:The objective of this study was to investigate milking frequency as a potential stressor in Holstein–Friesian dairy cows managed in a pastoral farming system. The circadian body (vaginal) temperature rhythm was measured in cows milked twice-a-day (2x) or once-a-day (1x) in two experiments. The first experiment was conducted at peak lactation (50 ± 11 days in milk, DIM) and the second in response to a transition from 2x to 1x milking at mid-lactation (153 ± 21 DIM). At peak lactation, body temperature was continuously recorded for seven days in 40 dairy cows, milked either 2x (two groups, n = 10 per group) or 1x (two groups, n = 10 per group) from the time of calving. At mid-lactation, 60 dairy cows were milked either 2x (four groups, n = 5 per group), 1x (four groups, n = 5 per group) or switched from 2x to 1x on the afternoon of 156 DIM (2x:1x, four groups, n = 5 per group). Body temperature was measured in three of the five cows per group (36 cows in total) for 10 days from 153 to 162 DIM. Milk yield and total grazing time (Experiment 2 only) were recorded in all cows. At peak lactation cows milked 2x had a higher (P ≤ 0.051) mean body temperature between 1600 and 0000 h than 1x cows (38.6 vs. 38.4 °C; SED = 0.03 °C). At mid-lactation, mean body temperature was also elevated between 1600 and 2000 h in 2x cows compared to 1x cows (2x: 38.6 °C, 1x:38.4 °C, SED = 0.04 °C; P < 0.001) and tended (P = 0.083) to be higher in 2x cows between 2000 and 0000 h. On the day the milking frequency was switched from 2x to 1x (156 DIM), mean body temperature still tended to be higher (P = 0.087) between 1600 and 2000 h in cows continuing on 2x compared with 2x:1x and 1x cows. Body temperature in 2x:1x cows on 157 DIM was lower than 2x cows and similar to that of 1x cows, but there was no consistent effect of milking frequency on body temperature from 158 to 162 DIM. Cows milked 2x had a higher daily milk yield than 1x cows at peak lactation and at mid-lactation (peak lactation 2x: 28.1 ± 5.1, 1x: 24.5 ± 4.7 kg milk per day). Time spent grazing between 1600 and 2000 h was initially at least 22 min higher (P = 0.031) in 1x cows than in 2x:1x and 2x cows on 153 DIM but there were no differences (P ≥ 0.107) in the remaining days of the trial. Milk yield in 2x:1x cows declined rapidly on 156 DIM to be lower (P < 0.001) than both 2x and 1x cows but from 157 DIM began to follow the same pattern as 1x cows. In conclusion, milking frequency had an effect on the circadian body temperature rhythm, particularly in the late afternoon and evening. There was a decline in body temperature from 1600 h if milking frequency was reduced, but this change was not explained by treatment differences in time spent grazing during the same period. The alterations in the circadian body temperature rhythm with milking frequency were likely due to differences in metabolic activity and internal heat production associated with locomotor activity and relative milk production rather than physiological stress per se.
Keywords:Dairy cow  Body temperature rhythm  Milking frequency  Once-a-day milking
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