Abstract

Simple SummaryMetabolic disorders are a key problem in the transition period of dairy cows and often appear before the onset of further health problems. Problems derive from difficulties animals have to adapt to large variations and disturbances occurring both outside and inside the organism. A lack of success in solving these issues may be due to predominant approaches in farm management and agricultural science, dealing with such disorders as merely negative side effects. Instead, a successful adaptation of animals to their living conditions should be seen as an important end in itself. Both farm management and agricultural sciences should support animals in their ability to cope with nutritional and metabolic challenges by employing a functional and result-driven approach.Metabolic disorders are a key problem in the transition period of dairy cows and often appear before the onset of further health problems. They mainly derive from difficulties the animals have in adapting to changes and disturbances occurring both outside and inside the organisms and due to varying gaps between nutrient supply and demand. Adaptation is a functional and target-oriented process involving the whole organism and thus cannot be narrowed down to single factors. Most problems which challenge the organisms can be solved in a number of different ways. To understand the mechanisms of adaptation, the interconnectedness of variables and the nutrient flow within a metabolic network need to be considered. Metabolic disorders indicate an overstressed ability to balance input, partitioning and output variables. Dairy cows will more easily succeed in adapting and in avoiding dysfunctional processes in the transition period when the gap between nutrient and energy demands and their supply is restricted. Dairy farms vary widely in relation to the living conditions of the animals. The complexity of nutritional and metabolic processes and their large variations on various scales contradict any attempts to predict the outcome of animals’ adaptation in a farm specific situation. Any attempts to reduce the prevalence of metabolic disorders and associated production diseases should rely on continuous and comprehensive monitoring with appropriate indicators on the farm level. Furthermore, low levels of disorders and diseases should be seen as a further significant goal which carries weight in addition to productivity goals. In the long run, low disease levels can only be expected when farmers realize that they can gain a competitive advantage over competitors with higher levels of disease.

Highlights

  • Dairy cows with high genetic merits live under quite heterogeneous nutritional and environmental conditions

  • The pathophysiology of metabolic disorders and postpartum diseases is quite complex, interrelated with many processes within or outside the intermediary metabolism, they are multifactorial and often driven by several interconnected risk factors. It is difficult for both scientists and the farm management to grasp the complexity and make the appropriate decisions to improve the adaptation capacity of dairy cows, in the transition period

  • Metabolic processes in early lactation are dominated by a pull effect originating from the high glucose demand of the epithelial cells in the udder and by a large variation on the various process levels

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Summary

Introduction

Dairy cows with high genetic merits live under quite heterogeneous nutritional and environmental conditions. They are capable of adapting and maintaining their internal organization in the face of changes and disturbances, while simultaneously producing high milk yields. Little is known about the limitations of dairy cows in their ability to adapt to and deal with variation and disturbances in their living conditions and the gap between nutrient supply and nutrient demand. The main objective of this paper is to reflect on the nutritional and physiological process of adaptation to the living conditions and on the prerequisites for a successful adaptation which avoids metabolic disorders in the transition period

How does Adaptation Work?
Metabolic Disorders and Production Diseases
Challenges Due to Varying Living Conditions
Variation in Metabolism
Discrepancy between Nutrient Demand and Supply
Metabolic Adaptation
Hierarchically Organized and Nested Systems
Challenged Farm Management
10. Challenged Agricultural Science
Findings
11. Conclusions
Full Text
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