10 Calf/Heifer Management Flashcards
Long term objectives of calf/heifer management
- minimize time to first calving
- maximize milk production potential
What is in colostrum
Antibodies (immunoglobulins)
Immune cells
Hormones (insulin, IGF-1)
Energy, protein, vitamin A and NaCl
Why is colostrum important (5)
- passive immunity
- maternal IgG protects newborn calves from disease
- IgG not transferred via placenta in cattle
- Insulin & IGF-1 promote gut development
- condensed source of nutrients
What are some causes of poor colostral quality
- leakage prior to calving
- first-calving heifers (less exposure to diff pathogens)
- high energy diet before calving (reduced IgG content)
Two ways of detecting colostrum quality
- colostrometer
- refractometer
What is the colostrometer
Antibody level estimated by specific gravity
Used on colostrum fresh from the cow or at room temp
What is a refractometer
Measures sugar/total solid content in milk, which is related to IgG concentration
How much bacteria can be found in colostrum
More than 93% of colostrum samples contained > 100,000 cfu/ml of bacteria
Poor sanitation of colostrum equipment? Handling?
Standard for bacteria in raw milk in AB
Needs to be less than 120,000 cells/mL or is not shipped
How often do bacteria counts double in colostrum left at room temp?
Doubles every 30 mins
Why is early consumption of colostrum, before intake of bacteria, important?
Presence of bacteria inhibits IgG absorption
If bacteria enters small intestine first, loses ability to absorb IgG
First couple of hours intestine can absorb protein without breaking it down (pinocytosis)
IgG closes the window for pinocytosis so bacteria cannot enter, or vice versa if bacteria are first
How can you decrease colostral bacterial content
Pasteurize at 60C for 60 mins
Does little damage to IgG
How does absorption efficiency of IgG change with pasteurization
It is higher in pasteurized colostrum bc less competition with bacteria for absorption by SI
Lower in colostrum with low and high bacterial count
How does timing of colostrum feeding affect IgG absorption
There is a window where intestine can absorb IgG
If fed right after birth, IgG concentration and absorption is higher
Reasons for failures of passive transfer
- calf does not get any colostrum
- calf does not get good colostrum (low IgG content, high bacterial counts)
- calf does not get enough colostrum
- calf does not get colostrum in time