Title: Dry Cow Nutrition and Management
1Dry Cow Nutrition and Management
2Phase Feeding
- Phase 1 Far off dry cows
- Phase 2 Close up dry cows (transition phase)
- Phase 3 Fresh cow (transition phase)
- Phase 4 Peak milk cows (set lactation curve)
- Phase 5 Peak dry matter cows (persistency)
- Phase 6 Tail end cow (least profitable)
3Phases
- Far-off
- 60 to 21 days before calving
- Phase 1
- Traditional dry cow period
- Close-up
- 21 days to freshening
- Phase 2
- Periparturient 3 days before to 7 days after
calving - Transition phase21 days pre-partum to 21 days
post-partum
4Early Dry Cow Goals
- Allow the mammary gland to recover
- Adjust/control body weight (3.25)
- Build the immune system
- Provide nutrients for the unborn calf
- Allow feet and legs to recover
- Minimize metabolic disorder risks
- Keep pregnant heifers growing while meeting dry
cow needs
5Length - 45 to 60 days
- Less than 40 days results in incomplete
involution and regeneration of the mammary gland - Over 70 days results in less milk due to
metabolic disorders and less income - Longer 60 to 80 days, target young cows, high
milk yielding cows, short calving interval - Shorter 40 to 45 days, older cows, low milk
yield, long calving interval - No dry days 25 to 33 percent less milk
- Short dry period new concept, cows gt 2nd
lactation, 40 days, more income
6Far Off Dry Activities
- Involution of mammary gland (reduces secretory
tissue, less DNA content) - Shift to lower energy diet to maintain body
weight - May allow feet and legs to recover on dirt or
pasture conditions - Maintain exercise (moving water sources away from
feed sources - Vaccinations for colostrum milk antibodies and
coliform mastitis
7Feeding the Far Off Dry Cow
- Time Dry off to 21 days prepartum
- Forage based ration with 11.3 Kg corn silage (as
fed basis) and 0.5 to 2.3 Kg of straw (low energy
diet approach from Illinois) - Long grass or legume forage (RFV gt 130) with no
mold - 0.9 to 2.3 Kg of grain (depending on forage
quality and BCS) - Top quality trace mineral and vitamin program
8 Control metabolic disorder Blood calcium
Mobilized blood fat (NEFA) Shift rumen
bacteria Build the immune system Maintain
dry matter intake
Close Up Dry Cow Goals
9Close Up Dry Cow Activities
- Mammary epithelial regeneration (bagging up,
increase secretary tissue, and hormonally
controlled) - Shift diet to transition to lactation
- Control blood calcium
- Minimize non-esterified fatty acid increase
(NEFA) an indication of weight loss - Cow comfort, space, and bunk/feeding area
10Feeding Close Up Dry Cows
- Time 21 days before calving
- Dry matter intake gt 11.3 Kg
- Feed 2.3 to 3.1 Kg of long forage DM (can be
straw), 9-11 Kg of corn silage, and 0.9 to 3.1 Kg
of close-up cow grain mix - Feed 4.5 to 5.4 Kg DM from high group TMR and
dry cow forage (straw or low potassium hay plus
close up grain mix)
11Close Up Dry Cow Grain Mix
- 0.9 to 3.2 Kilograms of grain
- Increase rumen undegraded protein
- Anionic salts (milk fever and blood calcium)
- Yeast culture (stabilize rumen)
- Replace 1/3 inorganic trace minerals with
organic trace minerals (immune system) - Increase vitamin E to 2500 IU per cow
- Consider propylene glycol or calcium propionate
(glucose precursor) - Add rumen protected niacin (ketosis control)
12Periparturient Period
- Reduction in feed intake (10 to 30 percent)
leading to fat deposition in the liver - Immunosuppression (white blood cells are less
effective in killing (phagocytosis) bacteria - Hypocalcemia (blood calcium levels below 8 mg/dl)
- Calving problems (dystocia, cows give up)
- Uterine contractions reduced (not clean)
- Less smooth muscle contractions in the digestive
tract (lower feed intake)
13Role of Immunity
- Hormonal changes around parturition can lead to
immunosuppressive - Other stressors
- Heat (reduce blood flow internally)
- Lower nutrient intake
- Disease exposure
- Comfort
- Highest incidence of mastitis
- Edema reduces blood flow
- Colostrum milk remains in the udder
14Drying Off Guidelines
- Level of milk lt 22 Kg
- Reduce feed intake, especially concentrate
- Long acting intra-mammary antibiotic for to
prevent or treat mastitis - Continue teat dipping
- DO NOT LIMIT WATER INTAKE
15Environmental Factors
- Photoperiod Short-days (8 h light 16 h dark)
leads to increased milk production (long-days
during lactation). - Heat stress Exacerbates decrease in dry matter
intake and shifts blood flow - Hormonal changes affect milk production and
immune function. - Cow comfort and feed bunk space (30 inches)
16Body Condition Score
- Optimal for cows is 3.0 to 3.5
- Optimal for heifers is 3.0 to 3.25
- Heavy cows should not lose body weight nor gain
additional weight - Thin cows below 2.75, add 1/2 BCS (60 lb)
- Above 2.75, maintain current BCS (thin cows milk
less, but they do not die)
17New Dry Cow Concepts
- Short dry period45 days
- Milk for an extra 20-25 days _at_ 30 Kg
- Only 2nd lactation cows
- One less pen move
- High straws diets for the entire dry period
- 30 of the ration dry matter (7 to 11 lb)
- Stimulate dry matter intake (calorie theory)
- Reduce fat mobilization during the transition
period
18 Transition Period3 Weeks Before to 3 Weeks
After Calving
- The most critical 6 wk of lactation cycle
- Determines profit for entire lactation!
- Nutrition or management may limit peak milk yield
- Health problems may limit milk, add costs, force
culling
19Signs of Inadequate Transition Management
- High incidence of metabolic disorders
- Poor appetites, low dry matter intakes
- Acidosis problems
- Rapid loss of BCS 1st mo post-calving
- Poor conception rate
20Metabolic Disorder Risks
- Metabolic disorders Goals
- Milk fever lt 4
- Ketosis lt 3
- DA lt 3
- Retained placenta lt 5
21Milk feverD.A.Retained placentaKetosisLameness
Cost of Metabolic Disorders
334 340 285 145 122
22 Illinois Data--DMI
23Milk Production
24The ability to observe and manage the fresh cow
in a group environment
Fresh Cow Principle
25 Step up nutrient intake Stabilize rumen
Optimize D.M. intake Observe the cow Set the
lactation profile
Goals Fresh Cows
26Fresh Cow Limitations
- Lower feed intake if challenged
- Injured more if competition exists
- Less likely to compete at feeding stations
- Fatigue quicker (weaker hind limb)
- Dominant cows in heat will pick on fresh and
smaller cows more
27 180 grams of sodium bicarbonate 12 grams
niacin 20-140 g yeast culture 150 g calcium
propionate Direct fed microbials (DFM or
probiotics)
Fresh Cow Additives
28Dr. Mike Hutjens Ration
- 2.2 Kg of quality hay (RFV gt 150) fed outside
the TMR (yes, not mixed in) - 2.2 Kg of the fresh cow cocktail mix
- Digestible fiber
- Trace mineral and vitamin E
- Additives (bicarb, niacin, calcium
propionate,yeast culture) - Remaining intake is high group TMR
29Time 1st lact 2nd lact
--------kg/cow/day------------Week 1
14.1 16.6Week 2 15.9
19.3Week 3 17.3 21.1Week 4
18.2 22.3 Week 5 18.9
23.9
Dry Matter Intake
30Stresses on Transition Cows
- Metabolic stress (unavoidable)
- Heat stress
- Overcrowding
- Infectious challenge
- Sub-optimal grouping and movement
- Social dominance
- Uncomfortable housing
- Rough handling
31Impacts of Stresses on Transition Cows
- Decrease DMI
- Divert nutrients to immune function
- Reduces milk production
- Interfere with lactogenic hormones
- Increase body fat mobilization
- Disrupts of normal metabolic shifts and
adaptations to lactation
32Fundamental Management and Nutrition Practices
For A Good Transition Cow Program
- Put the close up cows on a specific ration to
build the immune system and maintain feed intake - Reduce any stress (space, bunk area, heat stress,
or disease challenges) - Control metabolic disorders
- Stimulate feed intake after calving
- Avoid excessive weight loss (over 1kg per day)
- Minimizing moving cows frequently
- Develop a fresh cow ration