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Journal ArticleDOI

The relationships between energy balance, milk production and ovulation in postpartum Holstein cows

W.R. Butler, +2 more
- 01 Sep 1981 - 
- Vol. 53, Iss: 3, pp 742-748
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TLDR
It is suggested that energy balance during the first 20 days of lactation is important in determining the onset of ovarian activity following parturition.
Abstract
Energy balance and serum progesterone concentrations were monitored during early lactation in a group of high producing Holstein cows. The postpartum interval to normal ovulation averaged 36 +/- 6 days (range 6 to 83 days). Average energy balance during the first 20 days of lactation (cumulative daily calculated energy balance divided by days in milk) was inversely related to days to normal ovulation (r = -.60) and to milk production (r = -.80). Milk yield during this period was not closely related to days to ovulation (r = .30). Milk yield was also not significantly related to serum prolactin concentrations over the first 12 weeks of lactation (r = .27). During early lactation, energy balance was maximally negative until peak milk yield and then began returning toward zero, with the magnitude and duration of negative energy balance being quite variable. On the average, ovulation and the initiation of the first normal luteal phase occurred approximately 10 days after energy balance began returning toward zero. During this 10-day interval, a transient elevation in serum progesterone concentrations occurred in eight of 13 cows. These results suggest that energy balance during the first 20 days of lactation is important in determining the onset of ovarian activity following parturition.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Interrelationships between energy balance and postpartum reproductive function in dairy cattle.

TL;DR: Negative energy balance probably acts similarly to undernutrition and may manifest in delayed ovarian activity by impinging on pulsatile secretion of LH, and lower availability of glucose and insulin may also decrease LH pulsatility or limit ovarian responsiveness to gonadotropins.
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Undesirable side effects of selection for high production efficiency in farm animals: a review

TL;DR: A biological explanation for the occurrence of negative side effects of selection is presented and future application of modern reproduction and DNA-techniques in animal breeding may increase production levels even faster than at present, which may result in more dramatic consequences for behavioural, physiological and immunological traits.
Journal ArticleDOI

Risk factors for post partum ovarian dysfunction in high producing dairy cows in Belgium: a field study.

TL;DR: An epidemiological study of risk factors for postpartal ovarian disturbances was carried out on 334 high-yielding dairy cows in 6 well-managed Belgian herds and attention was focused on abnormal cyclicity during the preservice, postpartum period.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fertility in the high-producing dairy cow ☆

TL;DR: To maintain or recover high fertility in modern dairy cows calls for a two-pronged approach involving both inclusion of fertility in broader breeding goals and adjustment to management practices.
Journal ArticleDOI

Energy Balance and Ovarian Follicle Development Prior to the First Ovulation Postpartum in Dairy Cows Receiving Three Levels of Dietary Fat

TL;DR: Early postpartum follicular development in dairy cows was characterized by either ovulation of the first dominant follicle (OV), one or more waves of nonovulatory dominant follicles (NOV), or the formation of a follicular cyst (CYST) and the number of days to first ovulation was positively correlated with days to the EB nadir.
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