Literature DB >> 16726339

Occurrence of neonatal and postnatal mortality in range beef cattle. I. Calf loss incidence from birth to weaning, backward and breech presentations and effects of calf loss on subsequent pregnancy rate of dams.

D J Patterson1, R A Bellows, P J Burfening, J B Carr.   

Abstract

Data from 13,296 calvings collected over a 15-yr period indicated 893 calves died from birth to weaning for an average loss of 6.7%. Calves lost from birth through Day 3 postcalving accounted for a 4.6% loss with an additional 2.1% loss from Day 4 through weaning. Calf deaths from primiparous 2- and 3-yr-old dams accounted for 41.0% of total mortality. Losses within groups were primiparous 2-yr-olds, 10.9%; primiparous 3-yr-olds, 8.7%; second-calf 3-yr-olds, 4.1%; second-calf 4-yr-olds, 8.3%; multiparous 4-yr-olds, 4.8%; and dams 5 yr and older, 5.3%. The majority of calf deaths (57.4%) occurred within the first 24 h postpartum with 75% of the total occurring Days 0 through 7. This loss was similar among all dam age and parity groups. Calf death due to dystocia accounted for the single largest loss category through the first 96 h postpartum, resulting in 69.6, 39.6, 30.8 and 33.3% of the loss incidence for Day 0, 1, 2 and 3 postpartum, respectively. More (P < 0.01) male calves (510, 57.6%) died than females (376, 42.4%). Backward presentations occurred more frequently (P < 0.01) than breech (1.6 vs 0.6% of all births, respectively). Incidence of backward presentation was 2.3%, 5.6% and 0.9% for primiparous 2-yr-old, 3-yr-old and multiparous dams, respectively (P < 0.01); 64.2% of the backward calves were males and 35.8% females (P < 0.01). Survival of calves in backward presentation exceeded (P < 0.01) that of breech calves (70.7 vs 32.9%). Fall pregnancy rate of dams that lost calves and reentered the breeding herd that same year was 72.4% compared to 79.4% (P < 0.01) for contemporary females that did not lose calves. The depression in pregnancy rate was not specifically due to dystocia but apparently to some general effect of calf loss.

Entities:  

Year:  1987        PMID: 16726339     DOI: 10.1016/0093-691x(87)90273-1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Theriogenology        ISSN: 0093-691X            Impact factor:   2.740


  4 in total

1.  Quantifying subclinical trauma associated with calving difficulty, vigour, and passive immunity in newborn beef calves.

Authors:  Jennifer M Pearson; Elizabeth R Homerosky; Nigel A Caulkett; John R Campbell; Michel Levy; Edmond A Pajor; M Claire Windeyer
Journal:  Vet Rec Open       Date:  2019-01-25

2.  Clinical impacts of administering a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug to beef calves after assisted calving on pain and inflammation, passive immunity, health, and growth.

Authors:  Jennifer M Pearson; Edmond A Pajor; John R Campbell; Nigel A Caulkett; Michel Levy; Craig Dorin; M Claire Windeyer
Journal:  J Anim Sci       Date:  2019-04-29       Impact factor: 3.159

3.  Evaluation of Strategies to Improve the Environmental and Economic Sustainability of Cow-Calf Production Systems.

Authors:  Phillip A Lancaster; Robert L Larson
Journal:  Animals (Basel)       Date:  2022-02-05       Impact factor: 2.752

4.  A cross-classified and multiple membership Cox model applied to calf mortality data.

Authors:  Adel Elghafghuf; Henrik Stryhn; Cheryl Waldner
Journal:  Prev Vet Med       Date:  2014-03-21       Impact factor: 2.670

  4 in total

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