Abstract

Post-partum milk progesterone profiles from 1400 dairy cows were used to identify 296 animals which had ovulated 50 or more days post partum without being observed in oestrus. Of these, 165 cows were left as untreated controls, being inseminated at any observed oestrus after 60 days post partum. Fixed time insemination three and four days after a single cloprostenol injection (74 cows) resulted in a short calving-to-conception interval and a lower culling rate than in control cows, while insemination at observed oestrus after cloprostenol (57 cows) resulted in an even greater improvement in these parameters. The fixed-time insemination group required significantly more services per conception than either of the other groups ( P < 0.005). A study of the profiles suggested that not all of the cows had ovulated within four days of injection and that those ovulating later had a greater chance of being observed in oestrus and becoming pregnant if insemination was carried out only at observed oestrus after cloprostenol injection.

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