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Environmental variation effects fertility in tropical beef cattle
by
Wood, Benjamin J
, Speight, Shannon
, Hayes, Benjamin J
, Engle, Bailey N
, Fordyce, Geoffry
, Voss-Fels, Kai P
, Copley, James P
, Ross, Elizabeth M
in
Animal lactation
/ Animal reproduction
/ Beef
/ Beef cattle
/ Beef industry
/ Cattle
/ Corpus luteum
/ Environmental conditions
/ Fertility
/ Forage Based Livestock Systems
/ Heat
/ Heat stress
/ Humidity
/ Lactation
/ Livestock industry
/ Pregnancy
/ Puberty
/ Rain and rainfall
/ Temperature effects
2022
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Environmental variation effects fertility in tropical beef cattle
by
Wood, Benjamin J
, Speight, Shannon
, Hayes, Benjamin J
, Engle, Bailey N
, Fordyce, Geoffry
, Voss-Fels, Kai P
, Copley, James P
, Ross, Elizabeth M
in
Animal lactation
/ Animal reproduction
/ Beef
/ Beef cattle
/ Beef industry
/ Cattle
/ Corpus luteum
/ Environmental conditions
/ Fertility
/ Forage Based Livestock Systems
/ Heat
/ Heat stress
/ Humidity
/ Lactation
/ Livestock industry
/ Pregnancy
/ Puberty
/ Rain and rainfall
/ Temperature effects
2022
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While trying to remove the title from your shelf something went wrong :( Kindly try again later!
Do you wish to request the book?
Environmental variation effects fertility in tropical beef cattle
by
Wood, Benjamin J
, Speight, Shannon
, Hayes, Benjamin J
, Engle, Bailey N
, Fordyce, Geoffry
, Voss-Fels, Kai P
, Copley, James P
, Ross, Elizabeth M
in
Animal lactation
/ Animal reproduction
/ Beef
/ Beef cattle
/ Beef industry
/ Cattle
/ Corpus luteum
/ Environmental conditions
/ Fertility
/ Forage Based Livestock Systems
/ Heat
/ Heat stress
/ Humidity
/ Lactation
/ Livestock industry
/ Pregnancy
/ Puberty
/ Rain and rainfall
/ Temperature effects
2022
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Environmental variation effects fertility in tropical beef cattle
Journal Article
Environmental variation effects fertility in tropical beef cattle
2022
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Overview
Abstract
The northern Australia beef cattle industry operates in harsh environmental conditions which consistently suppress female fertility. To better understand the environmental effect on cattle raised extensively in northern Australia, new environmental descriptors were defined for 54 commercial herds located across the region. Three fertility traits, based on the presence of a corpus luteum at 600 d of age, indicating puberty, (CL Presence, n = 25,176), heifer pregnancy (n = 20,989) and first lactation pregnancy (n = 10,072) were recorded. Temperature, humidity, and rainfall were obtained from publicly available data based on herd location. Being pubertal at 600 d (i.e. CL Presence) increased the likelihood of success at heifer pregnancy and first lactation pregnancy (P < 0.05), underscoring the importance of early puberty in reproductive success. A temperature humidity index (THI) of 65–70 had a significant (P < 0.05) negative effect on first lactation pregnancy rate, heifer pregnancy and puberty at 600 d of age. Area under the curve of daily THI was significant (P < 0.05) and reduced the likelihood of pregnancy at first lactation and puberty at 600 days. Deviation from long-term average rainfall was not significant (P < 0.05) for any trait. Average daily weight gain had a significant and positive relationship (P < 0.05) for heifer and first lactation pregnancy. The results indicate that chronic or cumulative heat load is more determinantal to reproductive performance than acute heat stress. The reason for the lack of a clear relationship between acute heat stress and reproductive performance is unclear but may be partially explained by peak THI and peak nutrition coinciding at the same time. Sufficient evidence was found to justify the use of average daily weight gain and chronic heat load as descriptors to define an environmental gradient.
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