Atypical ovarian cycle length in dairy cows: Occurrence and effects on productivity and carbon emissions

Enteric fermentation by ruminants contributes to 30% of global livestock greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions (FAO, 2018), making ruminants one of the largest contributors per unit of feed intake. Dairy production has been cited as a major GHG emitter contributing to climate change, however increasing the...

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Main Author: Algherair, Ibrahim
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/73893/
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author Algherair, Ibrahim
author_facet Algherair, Ibrahim
author_sort Algherair, Ibrahim
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Enteric fermentation by ruminants contributes to 30% of global livestock greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions (FAO, 2018), making ruminants one of the largest contributors per unit of feed intake. Dairy production has been cited as a major GHG emitter contributing to climate change, however increasing the milk yield (MY) per cow has been successful in increasing feed efficiency (FE) and reducing enteric GHG emissions per litre of milk production. This is essential in maintaining global warming < 1.5°C up to 2030 and net zero by 2050, however the potential associated decline in pregnancy rate (PR) and infertility is a main factor that may contribute to GHG emissions, mainly due to the decline in the length of productive life of dairy cows. Survey data and modelling has been used to evaluate carbon emissions (CO2-eq.) per day of calving interval (CI) greater than 365 d and per percentage increase in dairy herd replacement rate (RR). This thesis aims to to evaluate the postpartum ovarian activity to classify dairy cows that had typical and atypical ovarian cycle length and evaluate the fertility and production data and calculate the impact of the length of the CI and RR on CO2-eq. of dairy production from Holstein Friesian (HF) dairy cows. The thesis presents four experiments (Expt. 1 to 4) that evaluate the occurrence of atypical postpartum ovarian cycle length (ACL) and compare the effect of ACL with typical cycle length (TCL) on fertility using milk progesterone (P4) concentrations to assess postpartum (pp) ovarian cycles. This thesis compares the effect of ACL on the pp interval (PPI) to conception, CI and PR and RR, and apply previous UK estimates of CO2-eq. for each addition day over a CI of 365 d and additional percent of RR to compare the effect of ACL and TCL on CO2-eq. in relation to CI, RR, infertility and FE.
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spelling nottingham-738932025-07-22T04:30:30Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/73893/ Atypical ovarian cycle length in dairy cows: Occurrence and effects on productivity and carbon emissions Algherair, Ibrahim Enteric fermentation by ruminants contributes to 30% of global livestock greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions (FAO, 2018), making ruminants one of the largest contributors per unit of feed intake. Dairy production has been cited as a major GHG emitter contributing to climate change, however increasing the milk yield (MY) per cow has been successful in increasing feed efficiency (FE) and reducing enteric GHG emissions per litre of milk production. This is essential in maintaining global warming < 1.5°C up to 2030 and net zero by 2050, however the potential associated decline in pregnancy rate (PR) and infertility is a main factor that may contribute to GHG emissions, mainly due to the decline in the length of productive life of dairy cows. Survey data and modelling has been used to evaluate carbon emissions (CO2-eq.) per day of calving interval (CI) greater than 365 d and per percentage increase in dairy herd replacement rate (RR). This thesis aims to to evaluate the postpartum ovarian activity to classify dairy cows that had typical and atypical ovarian cycle length and evaluate the fertility and production data and calculate the impact of the length of the CI and RR on CO2-eq. of dairy production from Holstein Friesian (HF) dairy cows. The thesis presents four experiments (Expt. 1 to 4) that evaluate the occurrence of atypical postpartum ovarian cycle length (ACL) and compare the effect of ACL with typical cycle length (TCL) on fertility using milk progesterone (P4) concentrations to assess postpartum (pp) ovarian cycles. This thesis compares the effect of ACL on the pp interval (PPI) to conception, CI and PR and RR, and apply previous UK estimates of CO2-eq. for each addition day over a CI of 365 d and additional percent of RR to compare the effect of ACL and TCL on CO2-eq. in relation to CI, RR, infertility and FE. 2023-07-22 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/73893/1/Final%20thesis%20Ibrahim%20Algherair.pdf Algherair, Ibrahim (2023) Atypical ovarian cycle length in dairy cows: Occurrence and effects on productivity and carbon emissions. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. dairy cows greenhouse gas emissions milk yields
spellingShingle dairy cows
greenhouse gas emissions
milk yields
Algherair, Ibrahim
Atypical ovarian cycle length in dairy cows: Occurrence and effects on productivity and carbon emissions
title Atypical ovarian cycle length in dairy cows: Occurrence and effects on productivity and carbon emissions
title_full Atypical ovarian cycle length in dairy cows: Occurrence and effects on productivity and carbon emissions
title_fullStr Atypical ovarian cycle length in dairy cows: Occurrence and effects on productivity and carbon emissions
title_full_unstemmed Atypical ovarian cycle length in dairy cows: Occurrence and effects on productivity and carbon emissions
title_short Atypical ovarian cycle length in dairy cows: Occurrence and effects on productivity and carbon emissions
title_sort atypical ovarian cycle length in dairy cows: occurrence and effects on productivity and carbon emissions
topic dairy cows
greenhouse gas emissions
milk yields
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/73893/