Reproductive hormone use and its association with herd-level factors on Dutch dairy farms

Publication date

2021-10

Authors

van der Laan, JannekeISNI 0000000436416876
Vos, Peter L A MISNI 0000000364110949
van den Borne, B H PISNI 0000000390143920
Aardema, HildeISNI 0000000393374281
van Werven, TISNI 0000000388495927

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

cc_by_nc_nd

Abstract

We studied the use of the 3 commonly used reproductive hormones, namely prostaglandins, GnRH, and progesterone, and associated herd-level factors on 760 Dutch dairy farms from 5 veterinary clinics. From 2017 to 2019 we collected data on the sales of reproductive hormones, converted this data into the number of reproductive hormone doses conducted, and expressed this as the annual number of reproductive hormone doses per 100 adult dairy cows. Additional herd-level information was available for 2019. Due to the excess of zeros in the data set (i.e., a substantial number of farms did not use any hormones), we used a zero-inflated negative binomial model to identify related herd-level factors for the use of reproductive hormones. In the entire study period of 2017 to 2019, 5.8% of the dairy farms did not use any reproductive hormones, with the proportion of nonusers varying between 0.0 and 10.3% per veterinary clinic. This proportion was around 13.5% on an annual basis. Prostaglandins were the most frequently used reproductive hormone in Dutch dairy cows (62.9%), followed by GnRH (33.1%) and progesterone (4.0%). Furthermore, participating in a veterinary herd health management program had a significant effect on reproductive hormone use. These farms used more reproductive hormones than farms that did not participate in a herd health management program and were less represented in the group of nonuser farms. Technologies, such as pedometers and automatic milking systems, also had an effect on reproductive hormone use. The presence of pedometers or activity monitors did not reduce the use of the reproductive hormones but was associated with a greater frequency of users. Farms with an automatic milking system used more reproductive hormones than farms with a conventional milking system. With this study, we have made a first step in achieving transparency in the Dutch dairy industry by providing an objective overview of reproductive hormone use on Dutch dairy farms and identifying associations with some herd-level factors.

Keywords

dairy cow, hormone treatment, management, reproduction, Food Science, Animal Science and Zoology, Genetics

Citation

van der Laan, J S M, Vos, P L A M, van den Borne, B H P, Aardema, H & van Werven, T 2021, 'Reproductive hormone use and its association with herd-level factors on Dutch dairy farms', Journal of Dairy Science, vol. 104, no. 10, pp. 10854-10862. https://doi.org/10.3168/jds.2020-19786