Abstract

Data were collected through a special record keeping system for 2,254 herds that used artificial insemination, 37% of which were enrolled in Dairy Herd Improvement Associations. Information was available on a total of 35,162 gestations, consisting of 24,367 Holstein, 5,849 Guernsey, 2,872 Jersey, 1,667 Ayrshire and 407 Brown Swiss pregnancies resulting in single births plus 930 multiple births. Breeds, twinning, sex of calf, parity of the cow and time of day on which estrus occurred were associated with differences in gestation length. Month of insemination had no effect. Mates and sires of the cows both affected gestation length slightly, but significantly. Selection of sires for high milk production of their daughters over a 23-year period appears to have had little, if any, effect on gestation length, as the mean gestation length has increased only one day, from 278 to 279 days for Holsteins during that time.

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