Agri Kultuur November 2018 | Page 30

Milk income is reduced by poor reproduction Dr Carel Muller, Research Associate, Faculty of Animal Sciences, University of Stellenbosch M ilk production systems in the Western Cape Province vary from fully or partially pasture-based to zero-grazing total mixed ration (TMR) systems. The rainfall in many parts of the province is low and erratic. This results in cultivated pastures having to be irrigated, especially during summer. Dairy farms with limited access to water sources for irrigation use a zero-grazing system based on forage crops like oats, wheat or barley produced during winter. The feed cost of dairy cows in zero-grazing system is generally higher than in pasture-based systems. The reason for this is the cost and feeding value of roughages used in the two systems. The cost of oat hay could be R2.40 per kg DM while cultivated pasture could be R1.80 per kg DM. The energy and protein levels of oat hay are also lower than that of cultivated pastures. Therefore, the composition and cost of diets providing similar protein and energy levels while containing oat hay or cultivated pastures as roughage sources would differ considerably. The concentrate component of a total diet containing oat hay is 63% in comparison to 27% for the pasture- based diet. The concentrate portion is also more expensive, i.e. being 74% vs. 44%, respectively, of the total diet cost. The higher feed cost increases the break-even milk yield levels for TMR-based diets in comparison to pasture- based diets. This explains the push for high milk yield levels in TMR-based dairying systems. However, feeding high levels of concentrates increases milk yield although at a diminishing rate per kg of concentrates fed. This could affect profit margins negatively. Milk prices AgriKultuur |AgriCulture and concentrate costs affect the optimum concentrate feeding levels in optimizing income over concentrate cost. In South Africa limited studies have been conducted to determine the effect of increasing concentrate feeding levels on the milk yield and profit margins of dairy cows. Milk yield vs. fertility The fertility of dairy cows has decreased in recent years. Research has shown that while the milk yield of Holstein cows has increased from 4750 in 1951 to 9000 kg in 1996, the conception rate of cows decreased from 68% to 40%. In South Africa the calving interval of Holstein cows also increased from 386 days in 1986 to 412 days in 2004. This has been associated with the increase in milk yield although other factors could also have contributed to this as dairy herds have become larger with less attention to individual cows. It is not clear whether the fertility of dairy cows has deteriorated genetically over time or whether a ceiling in the management capacity of people has been reached especially for high producing dairy cows in large herds in intensive housing conditions. Cows at high milk yield levels respond differently when on heat, i.e. showing fewer and less intensive heat signs while the period of standing heat is often shorter. However, although the general perception is that a high milk yield affects fertility negatively, this is not always demonstrated at the herd level. In well- managed herd fertility can be high even at high milk yield levels. The fertility of dairy cows is generally regarded as complex trait which is affected 30