Abstract

Abstract. Persistence in dairy animals can be used as selection criteria. Peak value in lactation can be used to predict total lactation production if within lactation persistence is high. This will provide information on early lactation and shorten generation interval. Major purpose of this study was to determine persistency within and between lactations of Turkish Saanen goats in morning, evening and daily milk yields. Two different methods were employed. One used ratios of the succeeding test days as dependent variables. The multivariate analyses indicated that effects of parity (P=0.05), year (P < 0.01), lactation length (P=0.05) and parity by year interaction (P < 0.01) were large. The other approach was to use within correlations and measure changes in milk production in different parities by using repeated measures analysis and modeling covariance structure using compound symmetry. The within correlations can be used as indicators of persistency. Effects of parity, test day and days in milk (DIM), DIM2, ln(DIM) and [ln(DIM)]2 on morning and evening values and total daily milk weights were analyzed to characterize the lactation curve. Values of DIM and repeated measure id number of the goats were added to the model within parity. Within lactation correlations were estimated as 0.22 for morning, 0.28 for evening and 0.27 for daily milk yield. Evening milk tests can alone be used to estimate lactation milk yield, instead of the total test day milk yield. Milk yield increased until lactation four, and decreased in lactation five in morning, evening and daily milk yields. There was a sharp increase from first lactation to second (ranged from 22.0 to 26.8%) and second lactation to third (ranged from 20.0 to 22.2%).

Highlights

  • Dairy cattle breeders use test day records to estimate breeding values instead of using all the lactation records

  • Persistency can be used as selection criteria in dairy animals

  • Two methods were used to estimate persistency; one method used the ratio of succeeding test days and the other calculated within correlation in a repeated measures analysis, modeling the covariance structure

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Summary

Introduction

Dairy cattle breeders use test day records to estimate breeding values instead of using all the lactation records. Persistency estimates in a dairy herd may give an idea on how much information early records, or less number of records provide. Based on this information, animals may be culled or selected using a few tests (high persistency), or using all tests (low persistency). The number of tests required to estimate the lactation milk yield may decrease. Major purpose of this study was to estimate morning, evening and total daily milk yield within lactation correlations (persistency) for Turkish Saanen goats and estimate milk yields for the animals in different lactations. Two methods were used to estimate persistency; one method used the ratio of succeeding test days and the other calculated within correlation in a repeated measures analysis, modeling the covariance structure

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