Title: Care of the Newborn Calf
1Care of the Newborn Calf
- AVS346
- Dairy Cattle Technology
- David Marcinkowski
2Goals of Heifer Program
- Healthy cow
- Grown inexpensively
- Optimum size
- Capable of calving easily
- High genetic potential
- Ability to express that potential
3Approximate Number of Animals by Age
4Number of Replacement Heifers is Determined By
- Calf Mortality
- Reproductive Performance
- Calving interval
- Age at First Calving
5NAHMS Heifer Data
National Animal Health Monitoring System
6Colostrum Composition
Table - Composition of colostrum, transitional
milk and whole milk
7Antibody Levels and Calf Mortality
8IgG Levels in Calves
9Colostrum Feeding
- Keys
- Quality
- Quantity
- Timing
10Colostrum Quality
- Evaluate using
- Colostrometer
- Elisa tests
- Only older cows
- 18 lb Rule
- Biosecurity
- Blood test all colostrum donors
- Refrigeration - Up to 1 week
- Freezing - OK - Good up to one year
- Thaw carefully to not harm antibodies
- Warm Water or Microwave
11Colostrometer
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15Colostrum fed during the first 12 hours after
birth and heifer calf mortality
Clemson University Study
16Care at Birth
- Clean, dry maternity area
- Clean dams udder
- Be present at birth
- Disinfect navel
- Allow dam to lick calf
- Identification
- Feed colostrum
- Allow calf to dry off
- Remove calf from dam
17Navel Ill
- Umbilical infection
- Caused by coliforms
- E. coli, Klebsiella
- 0.2 of calves affected
- Clinical Signs
- Lameness
- Swollen joints
- Septic Arthritis
- Under 45 days old
- Failure of passive transfer
- Prevention
- Dip navel in tincture of iodine (gt7)
- Only 46.6 of farms dip navels
18Time Calves Remain with Dam After Birth and
Effect on Mortality
19Colostrum Substitutes
- Derived from blood or whey
- Used for biosecurity reasons
- Antibodies not specific to the bugs in your herd
- Activity of antibodies suspect in some products
- Good as supplement not as replacement
20Feeding Alternatives
- Whole milk
- Waste milk
- Milk replacer
- Fermented colostrum
21Whole and Waste Milk
- Whole milk
- Natural alternative - Good gains
- Expensive
- Pooled from number of cows
- Disease transmission Johnes and BLV
- Pasteurization
- Waste milk
- Most economical
- Antibiotic residues
- Disease transmission
- Pasteurization
22Feed Analysis of Whole Milk DM Basis
23Fermented Colostrum
- Using waste product
- Very economical - Waste product
- Good gains can be achieved
- Preserved by acid fermentation
- Need cool temperatures for storage
- Plastic storage containers
- May run short
- Smells bad
- Biosecurity??
24Milk Replacer
- Economical alternative
- Good growth rates
- Pay attention to quality
- Medicated products
- Follow mixing directions
25Milk Replacer Tag
26Protein Sources
27Fat Sources
28Feeding MR
- Daily recommendations vary
- 10-12.5 solids in mixed MR
- 8-12 of calfs body weight daily
- 80 calf
- 10 solids 8 of BW .64 lbs of MR
- 12.5 S 12 of BW 1.2 lbs.of MR
- Almost double between max and min!!
29Factor Required for Rumen Development
- Establishment of bacteria in the rumen
- Liquid in the rumen
- Outflow of material from the rumen (muscular
action) - Absorptive ability of the tissue
- Substrate available in the rumen
30Calf Starter
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32Feeding Calf Starter
- Start feeding in first week of life
- Increase amount fed as calfs intake increases
- Feed enough for one day
- Calf can be weaned when consuming 2-3 lbs of
starter/day
33Braden Bottles
34To Hay or Not to Hay??
- Rumen development is chemical in nature
- Scratch factor is not important until 6-7 weeks
- Hay limits intake and growth
- Most ends up as bedding
35VFA Production in Rumen
36Affect of Feeding on Rumen Development
Rumen Development at 6 Weeks of Age
Milk and Grain
Milk
Milk and Hay
37Affect of Feeding on Rumen Development
12 Weeks Of Age
Milk Hay Grain
Milk Hay
38Cold Stressed Calf
- More energy required lt50F
- Increase solids content to 15-18
- gt18 cause diarrhea
- May need to add a third feeding
- Warm MR
- Starter intake may go down with increase in MR
solids