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  4. Big dairy data to unravel effects of environmental, physiological and morphological factors on milk production of mountain-pastured Braunvieh cows
 
research article

Big dairy data to unravel effects of environmental, physiological and morphological factors on milk production of mountain-pastured Braunvieh cows

Duruz, Solange  
•
Vajana, Elia  
•
Burren, Alexander
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July 1, 2020
Royal Society Open Science

The transhumance system, which consists in moving animals to high mountain pastures during summer, plays a considerable role in preserving both local biodiversity and traditions, as well as protecting against natural hazard. In cows, particularly, milk production is observed to decline as a response to food shortage and climatic stress, leading to atypical lactation curves that are barely described by current lactation models. Here, we relied on 5 million monthly milk records from over 200 000 Braunvieh and Original Braunvieh cows to devise a new model accounting for transhumance, and test the influence of environmental, physiological and morphological factors on cattle productivity. Counter to expectations, environmental conditions in the mountain showed a globally limited impact on milk production during transhumance, with cows in favourable conditions producing only 10% more compared with cows living in detrimental conditions, and with precipitation in spring and altitude revealing to be the most production-affecting variables. Conversely, physiological factors such as lactation number and pregnancy stage presented an important impact over the whole lactation cycle with 20% difference in milk production, and alter the way animals respond to transhumance. Finally, the considered morphological factors (cow height and foot angle) presented a smaller impact during the whole lactation cycle (10% difference in milk production). The present findings help to anticipate the effect of climate change and to identify problematic environmental conditions by comparing their impact with the effect of factors that are known to influence lactation.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1098/rsos.200638
Web of Science ID

WOS:000546992100001

Author(s)
Duruz, Solange  
Vajana, Elia  
Burren, Alexander
Flury, Christine
Joost, Stephane  
Date Issued

2020-07-01

Publisher

ROYAL SOC

Published in
Royal Society Open Science
Volume

7

Issue

7

Article Number

200638

Subjects

Multidisciplinary Sciences

•

Science & Technology - Other Topics

•

high alpine grazing

•

transhumance

•

climate change

•

lactation curve modelling

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braunvieh dairy cattle

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environmental variables

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agricultural land abandonment

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lactation curve

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swiss mountains

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coagulation properties

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production traits

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body condition

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yield

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cattle

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holstein

Note

This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution License.

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LASIG  
Available on Infoscience
July 23, 2020
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/170289
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