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J. Dairy Sci. 87:3029-3037
© American Dairy Science Association, 2004.

Genetic Relationships Between Persistency and Reproductive Performance in First-Lactation Canadian Holsteins

B. L. Muir1, J. Fatehi2 and L. R. Schaeffer2

1 Canadian Dairy Network, 150 Research Lane, Guelph, ON, Canada N1G 4T2
2 Centre for the Genetic Improvement of Livestock, Department of Animal and Poultry Science, University of Guelph, ON, Canada N1G 2W1

Corresponding author: B. L. Muir; e-mail: muir{at}cdn.ca.

The main objective of this study was to estimate genetic relationships between lactation persistency and reproductive performance in first lactation. Relationships with day in milk at peak milk yield and estimated 305-d milk yield were also investigated. The data set contained 33,312 first-lactation Canadian Holsteins with first-parity reproductive, persistency, and productive information. Reproductive performance traits included age at first insemination, nonreturn rate at 56 d after first insemination as a virgin heifer and as a first-lactation cow, calving difficulty at first calving and calving interval between first and second calving. Lactation persistency was defined as the Wilmink b parameter for milk yield and was calculated by fitting lactation curves to test day records using a multiple-trait prediction procedure. An 8-trait genetic analysis was performed using the Variance Component Estimation package (VCE 5) via Gibbs sampling to estimate genetic parameters for all traits. Heritabilities of persistency, day in milk at peak milk yield and estimated 305-d milk yield were 0.18, 0.09 and 0.45, respectively. Heritabilities of reproduction were low and ranged from 0.03 to 0.19. The highest heritability was for age at first insemination. Heifer reproductive traits were lowly genetically correlated, whereas cow reproductive traits were moderately correlated. Heifers younger than average when first inseminated and/or conceived successfully at first insemination tended to have a more persistent first lactation. First lactation was more persistent if heifers had difficulty calving (rg = 0.43), or conceived successfully at first insemination in first lactation (rg = 0.32) or had a longer interval between first and second calving (rg = 0.17). Estimates of genetic correlations of reproductive performance with estimated 305-d milk yield were different in magnitude, but similar in sign to those with persistency (0.02 to 0.51).

Key Words: genetic parameter • persistency • reproduction

Abbreviation key: AFS = age at first insemination as a heifer (in days), CD = calving difficulty, CI = calving interval, MILK = estimated 305-d milk yield in first lactation, MTP = multiple-trait prediction, NRRC = nonreturn rate at 56 d after first insemination in first lactation, NRRH = nonreturn rate at 56 d after first insemination as a heifer, PeakD = day in milk of peak milk yield




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