Grand Valley Fortifiers Ltd. PO Box 726, Cambridge ON, N1R 5W6
1006704
Dairy Grist
WESTERN & PRAIRIE EDITION A PERIODIC NEWSLETTER PRODUCED BY GRAND VALLEY FORTIFIERS VOLUME 3, ISSUE 3 | WINTER 2023
Dear Milk Producing Friends, After a generally dry summer in the Prairies and the West, with varying crop yields, it is heartening to know that compared to Ontario, crop quality is quite good. Knowing the negative impact of mycotoxins on herd health and reproductivity. However, we have chosen to include an article on this important subject in this edition of the Dairy Grist. With persistently high protein (soy) costs, and significantly increased interest rates, maximizing the use of forages in the diets, as well as home-grown and/or alternative protein sources will certainly impact bottom lines on dairies this year. I hope that you find the articles authored by Sarah Robson, Kathleen Shore and Henry Verhoog on these important subjects informative and helpful. It has been wonderful to see our dairy focused team continue to expand, in the Prairies with the addition of Edwin Suebzon in Manitoba, Emily Cunningham in Alberta and Ciaran Murphy in British Columbia. I trust that you will join us in welcoming these new Grand Valley Fortifiers team members. As we will soon all celebrate Christmas, the birth of our Saviour, Jesus Christ, and enter the new year in 2024, I and the entire Grand Valley Fortifiers team want to wish you and your family a very blessed Christmas and much health, happiness and success in 2024. Thank you for the privilege of working with you in your dairy operations. Sincerely, Ian Ross, President & CEO, GVF group of companies
FACTORS AFFECTING COLOSTRUM YIELD
by: JEFF KEUNEN M.Sc., Ruminant Nutritionist
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very year, in late fall and through the winter months, we inevitably hear from a handful of producers concerned with low colostrum yields on their most recent cows that have calved. Reasons for low colostrum yields in cows has been poorly studied and on most farms the problem tends to resolve itself with some small tweaks to the dry cow ration. Recently, a study done by researchers at Cornell University in New York, attempted to summarize the environmental and nutritional factors that influence the quality and quantity of colostrum. We will summarize the key takeaways from that study below. Monthly colostrum yields for the study are summarized in Figure 1. The median (range) colostrum yield was 4.1 (0.1-38.6) kg for primiparous and 5.0 kg (0.1-43.8) kg for multiparous cows. Average colostrum quality (Brix %) was 24.6 and 25.7 for primiparous and multiparous cows, respectively.
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Fig 1. Monthly colostrum yield (kg) from 5,790 primiparous and 12,553 multiparous Holstein cows from 18 NY farms
When looking at the results of the study on an individual animal basis here are the factors that affect colostrum yield. Brix %: Higher Brix % leads to a lower colostrum yield, suggesting a dilution effect as volume increases the amount of total IgGs stays the same, thus leading to a lower Brix % reading.
Ian Ross, President & CEO | David Ross, VP & CMO Gennadii Bondarenko | Mark Bowman | Lisa McGregor | Sarah Robson | Ola Skoczylas, Ruminant Nutritionists