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Journal of Dairy Science Vol. 72 No. 1 180-186
© 1989 by American Dairy Science Association ®
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Heritabilities of and Genetic Correlations Among Six Health Problems in Holstein Cows1

H. K. Lin2, P. A. Oltenacu2,3,, L. D. Van Vleck2, H. N. Erb3 and R. D. Smith2

New York State College of Agriculture and Life Sciences and New York State College of Veterinary Medicine, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853

ABSTRACT

Information from 7712 lactations of Holstein dairy cows was collected from 33 commercial herds around Ithaca, NY in the 3 yr from 1981 to 1983. The data were divided into subsets corresponding to lactation 1, lactation 2, and lactation 3 or greater. To estimate heritabilities of dystocia, retained placenta, metritis, ovarian cysts, milk fever, and mastitis, a mixed linear model (herd-year fixed and sire random effects) with 0 or 1 as the observed response was used. Variance components were estimated using Henderson's Method 3. The results show moderate heritabilities (.15 to .40) for dystocia, metritis, milk fever, and mastitis and low heritability (less than .12) for retained placenta and cystic ovaries. Genetic correlations between dystocia, retained placenta, metritis, and mastitis were moderate in size and positive, whereas cystic ovaries were correlated negatively with dystocia and retained placenta. A general reproductive health trait (dystocia, retained placenta, metritis, cystic ovaries, and milk fever combined in one trait) also was analyzed. The estimated heritability of this trait was .21, .11, and .00 for first calf heifers, second lactation cows, and older cows, respectively.


FOOTNOTES

1 Supported in part by US Department of Agriculture, Science and Education Administration, Research Grant Number 59-2361-0-2-073-0.

2 Department of Animal Science.

3 Department of Clinical Sciences.

4 Reprint requests.




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Copyright © 1989 by the American Dairy Science Association ®.