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Genetic evaluation of heat tolerance in Holsteins using test-day production records and NASA POWER weather data

Authors :
Paige L. Rockett
I.L. Campos
C.F. Baes
D. Tulpan
F. Miglior
F.S. Schenkel
Source :
Journal of Dairy Science, Vol 106, Iss 10, Pp 6995-7007 (2023)
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2023.

Abstract

ABSTRACT: Heat stress is a prominent issue in livestock production, even for intensively housed dairy herds in Canada. Production records and meteorological data can be combined to assess heat tolerance in dairy cattle. The overall aim of this study was to evaluate the possibility of genetic evaluation for heat tolerance in Canadian dairy cattle. The 2 specific objectives were (1) to estimate the genetic parameters for milk, fat, and protein yield for Holsteins while accounting for high environmental heat loads, and (2) to determine if a genotype-by-environment interaction causes reranking of top-ranked sires between environments with low and high heat loads. A repeatability test-day model with a heat stress function was used to evaluate the genetic merit for milk, fat, and protein yield under heat stress and at thermal comfort for first parity in 5 regions in Canada. The heat stress function for each trait was defined using a specific temperature-humidity index (THI) threshold. The purpose of this function was to quantify the level of heat stress that was experienced by the dairy cattle. The estimated genetic correlation between the general additive genetic effect and the additive effect on the slope of the change in the trait phenotype for milk, fat, and protein yield ranged from −0.16 to −0.30, −0.20 to −0.44, and −0.28 to −0.42, respectively. These negative correlations imply that there is an antagonistic relationship between sensitivity to heat stress and level of production. The heritabilities for milk, fat, and protein yield at 15 units above the THI threshold ranged from 0.15 to 0.27, 0.11 to 0.15, and 0.11 to 0.15, respectively. Finally, the rank correlations between the breeding values from a repeatability model with no heat stress effect and the breeding values accounting for heat stress for the 100 top-ranked bulls indicated possible interaction between milk production traits and THI, resulting in substantial reranking of the top-ranked sires in Canada, especially for milk yield. This is the first study to implement weather data from the NASA POWER database in a genetic evaluation of heat tolerance in dairy cattle. The NASA POWER database is a novel alternative meteorological resource that is potentially more reliable and consistent and with broader coverage than weather station data increasing the number of animals that could be included in a heat stress evaluation.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00220302
Volume :
106
Issue :
10
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Journal of Dairy Science
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.9ea14f01ae43ad8b3bdf246168be75
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3168/jds.2022-22776