Use of insemination data for joint evaluation of male and female fertility in predominantly seasonal-calving dairy herds

被引:1
|
作者
Haile-Mariam, Mekonnen [1 ]
Pryce, J. E. [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Agr Victoria Res, AgriBio, Ctr AgriBiosci, 5 Ring Rd, Bundoora, Vic 3083, Australia
[2] La Trobe Univ, Sch Appl Syst Biol, Bundoora, Vic 3083, Australia
关键词
male fertility; female fertility; evaluation; cross-validation; BULL FERTILITY; GENETIC-PARAMETERS; TRAITS; PREDICTION; ASSOCIATION; NONRETURN; GENOMICS; CATTLE;
D O I
10.3168/jds.2020-20006
中图分类号
S8 [畜牧、 动物医学、狩猎、蚕、蜂];
学科分类号
0905 ;
摘要
Conception in dairy cattle is influenced by the fertility of the cow and the bull and their interaction. Despite genetic selection for female fertility in many countries, selection for male fertility is largely not practiced. The primary objective of this study was to quantify varia-tion in male and female fertility using insemination data from predominantly seasonal-calving herds. Nonreturn rate (NRR) was derived by coding each insemination as successful (1) or failed (0) based on a minimum of at least 25 d. The NRR was treated as a trait of the bull with semen (male fertility) and the cow that is mated (female fertility). The data (805,463 cows that mated to 5,776 bulls) were used to estimate parameters using either models that only included bulls with mating data or models that fitted the genetic and permanent environmental (PE) effects of bulls and cows simultaneously. We also evaluated whether fitting genetic and PE effects of bulls as one term is better for ranking bulls based on NRR compared with a model that ignored genetic effect. The age of cows that were mated, age of the bulls with semen data, season of mating, breed of cow that mated, inbreeding of cows and bulls, and days from calving to mating date were found to have a significant effect on NRR. Only about 3% of the total variance was explained by the random effects in the model, despite fitting the genetic and PE effects of the bull and cow. The 2 components of fertility (male and fertility) were not correlated. The heritability of male fertility was low (0.001 to 0.008), and that of female fertility was also low (similar to 0.016). The highest heritability estimate for male fertility was obtained from the model that fitted the additive genetic relationship matrix and PE component of the bull as one term. When this model was used to calculate bull solutions, the difference between bulls with at least 100 inseminations was up to 19.2% units (-9.6 to 9.6%). Bull solutions from this model were compared with bull solutions that were predicted fitting bull effects ignoring pedigree. Bull solutions that were obtained considering pedigree had (1) the highest accuracy of prediction when early insemination was used to predict yet-to-be observed insemination data of bulls, and (2) improved model stability (i.e., a higher correlation between bull solutions from 2 randomly split herds) compared with the model which fitted bull with no pedigree. For practical purposes, the model that fitted genetic and PE effect as one term can provide more accurate semen fertility values for bulls than the model without genetic effect. To conclude, insemination data from predominantly seasonal-calving herds can be used to quantify variability between bulls for male fertility, which makes their ranking on NRR feasible. Potentially this information can be used for monitoring bulls and can supplement efforts to improve herd fertility by avoiding or minimizing the use of semen from subfertile bulls.
引用
收藏
页码:11807 / 11819
页数:13
相关论文
共 40 条
  • [11] Seasonal calving UK dairy herds: A farmer survey of fertility and veterinary services
    Giles, George
    Fishbourne, Emma
    Smith, Robert Frank
    Higgins, Helen Mary
    VETERINARY RECORD, 2022, 190 (03) : no
  • [12] Risk factors associated with animal mortality in pasture-based, seasonal-calving dairy and beef herds
    Ring, S. C.
    McCarthy, J.
    Kelleher, M. M.
    Doherty, M. L.
    Berry, D. P.
    JOURNAL OF ANIMAL SCIENCE, 2018, 96 (01) : 35 - 55
  • [13] Bayesian spatio-temporal modelling of national milk-recording data of seasonal-calving New Zealand dairy herds
    Clements, ACA
    Pfeiffer, DU
    Hayes, D
    PREVENTIVE VETERINARY MEDICINE, 2005, 71 (3-4) : 183 - 196
  • [14] Economic impact of different strategies to use sex-sorted sperm for reproductive management in seasonal-calving, pasture-based dairy herds
    Ruelle, E.
    Shalloo, L.
    Butler, S. T.
    JOURNAL OF DAIRY SCIENCE, 2021, 104 (11) : 11747 - 11758
  • [15] Evaluation of delayed timing of artificial insemination with sex-sorted sperm on pregnancy per artificial insemination in seasonal-calving, pasture-based lactating dairy cows
    Drake, E.
    Holden, S. A.
    Aublet, V.
    Doyle, R. C.
    Millar, C.
    Moore, S. G.
    Maicas, C.
    Randi, F.
    Cromie, A. R.
    Lonergan, P.
    Butler, S. T.
    JOURNAL OF DAIRY SCIENCE, 2020, 103 (12) : 12059 - 12068
  • [16] Seasonal evaluation of artificial insemination and natural service pregnancy rates in dairy herds
    Niles, D
    Risco, CA
    Thatcher, MJ
    COMPENDIUM ON CONTINUING EDUCATION FOR THE PRACTICING VETERINARIAN, 2002, 24 (04): : S44 - S48
  • [17] Associations between postpartum fertility phenotypes and genetic traits in seasonal-calving, pasture-based lactating dairy cows
    Canadas, E. Rojas
    Herlihy, M. M.
    Kenneally, J.
    Grant, J.
    Kearney, F.
    Lonergan, P.
    Butler, S. T.
    JOURNAL OF DAIRY SCIENCE, 2020, 103 (01) : 1002 - 1015
  • [18] The creation and evaluation of a model to simulate the probability of conception in seasonal-calving pasture-based dairy heifers
    Caroline Fenlon
    Luke O’Grady
    Stephen Butler
    Michael L. Doherty
    John Dunnion
    Irish Veterinary Journal, 70
  • [19] Fertility of frozen sex-sorted sperm at 4 x 106 sperm per dose in lactating dairy cows in seasonal-calving pasture-based herds
    Maicas, C.
    Holden, S. A.
    Drake, E.
    Cromie, A. R.
    Lonergan, P.
    Butler, S. T.
    JOURNAL OF DAIRY SCIENCE, 2020, 103 (01) : 929 - 939
  • [20] Reproductive management of dairy herds in New Zealand: Attitudes, priorities and constraints perceived by farmers managing seasonal-calving, pasture-based herds in four regions
    Brownlie, T. S.
    Weir, A. M.
    Tarbotton, I.
    Morton, J. M.
    Heuer, C.
    McDougall, S.
    NEW ZEALAND VETERINARY JOURNAL, 2011, 59 (01) : 28 - 39