» Articles » PMID: 39409710

Estimation of Genetic Parameters for Milk Production Rate and Its Stability in Holstein Population

Overview
Journal Animals (Basel)
Date 2024 Oct 16
PMID 39409710
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Milk production rate (MPR) refers to the rate of milk secretion per hour (kg/h), calculated from the harvested milk yield and milking interval, and it is considered an appropriate measure to evaluate the production potential of cows. The objective of this study was to estimate the phenotypic and genetic parameters of milk production rate traits. In this study, the milking records of 4760 Holstein cows were collected, and four milk yield traits and six milk production rate traits were defined. The MIXED procedure was used to detect the impacts of non-genetic effects on milk yield and milk production rate traits, including parity, measured season and lactation stage. Variance and covariance components for milk yield and milk production rate traits were estimated using a univariate linear repeatability model. Parity, measurement season and lactation stage had significant effects ( < 0.01) on milk yield, milk production rate and its stability. Milk yield and milk production traits had high heritability, and ranged from 0.25 to 0.39. The stability of milk production rate had low heritability (0.04~0.05). Milk production rate is beneficial for the devolving novel trait in dairy breeding and provides new insights for herd management and genetic selection of production performance of dairy cattle.

References
1.
Chen S, Boerman J, Gloria L, Pedrosa V, Doucette J, Brito L . Genomic-based genetic parameters for resilience across lactations in North American Holstein cattle based on variability in daily milk yield records. J Dairy Sci. 2023; 106(6):4133-4146. DOI: 10.3168/jds.2022-22754. View

2.
Penry J, Crump P, Ruegg P, Reinemann D . Short communication: Cow- and quarter-level milking indicators and their associations with clinical mastitis in an automatic milking system. J Dairy Sci. 2017; 100(11):9267-9272. DOI: 10.3168/jds.2017-12839. View

3.
Wang A, Brito L, Zhang H, Shi R, Zhu L, Liu D . Exploring milk loss and variability during environmental perturbations across lactation stages as resilience indicators in Holstein cattle. Front Genet. 2022; 13:1031557. PMC: 9757536. DOI: 10.3389/fgene.2022.1031557. View

4.
Poppe M, Bonekamp G, van Pelt M, Mulder H . Genetic analysis of resilience indicators based on milk yield records in different lactations and at different lactation stages. J Dairy Sci. 2020; 104(2):1967-1981. DOI: 10.3168/jds.2020-19245. View

5.
Oliveira Junior G, Schenkel F, Alcantara L, Houlahan K, Lynch C, Baes C . Estimated genetic parameters for all genetically evaluated traits in Canadian Holsteins. J Dairy Sci. 2021; 104(8):9002-9015. DOI: 10.3168/jds.2021-20227. View