Title of article :
Genetic and phenotypic parameters of lactations longer than 305 days (extended lactations)
Author/Authors :
Goddard، M. E. نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Abstract :
Test-day milk yield and somatic cell count data over extended lactation (lactation to 540–600 days) were analysed considering
part lactations as different traits and fitting random regression (RR) models. Data on Australian Jersey and Holstein Friesian
(HF) were used to demonstrate the shape of the lactation curve and data on HF were used for genetic study. Test-day data
from about 100 000 cows that calved between 1998 and 2005 were used for this study. In all analyses, a sire model was
used.When part lactations were considered as different traits, protein yield early in the lactation (e.g. first 2 months) had a
genetic correlation of about 0.8 with protein yield produced after 300 days of lactation. Genetic correlations between lactation
stages that are adjacent to each other were high (0.9 or more) within parity. Across parities, genetic correlations were high for
both protein and milk yield if they are within the same stage of lactation. Phenotypic correlations were lower than genetic
correlations. Heritability of milk-yield traits estimated from the RR model varied from 0.15 at the beginning of the lactation to
as high as 0.37 by the 4th month of lactation. All genetic correlations between different days in milk were positive, with the
highest correlations between adjacent days in milk and decreasing correlations with increasing time-span. The pattern of
genetic correlations between milk yield in the second 300 days (301 to 600 days of lactation) do not markedly differ from the
pattern in the first 300 days of lactation. The lowest estimated genetic correlation was 0.15 between milk yield on days 45 and
525 of lactation. The result from this study shows that progeny of bulls with high estimated breeding values for yield traits and
those that produce at a relatively high level in the first few months are the most likely candidates for use in herds favouring
extended lactations.
Keywords :
Correlation , dairy cows , milk-yield traits , Lactation , Variation