Improving herd fertility at Potstown Farm

Wednesday, 21 February 2024

Managing increased cow numbers with the same level of staff can put constraints on herd fertility rates. Addressing this challenge has been a key focus for Potstown Farm in Lockerbie whose multi-pronged approach has seen a 10% increase in pregnancy rate.

About Potstown Farm

The Owen family manage Potstown Farm, home to an all-year-round calving herd of pedigree Holsteins and Jersey cows. Starting with just 90 Holsteins and 177 acres in 1988, the family have been gradually increasing the size of both the herd and the farm ever since.

Today, the family farms over 350 acres and has recently invested in a new cubicle shed as well as two additional robots. Four years ago, they decided to change half the herd to Jerseys and today cow numbers stand at 255 with almost 340 followers.

The herd’s average annual yield is around 9,000 L with a recent increase in butterfat of 5.3% compared with 4.09% butterfat previously. The team are hopeful that they will maintain the butterfat levels over the coming months.

Breeding

Sexed semen is used exclusively on cows and heifers with beef semen used on second or third service. Bull selection is done on a mainly £PLI basis although milk yield, butterfat percentage, type merit, legs and feet and fertility are used as well along with teat length and placement for robotic milking.

Gareth uses his AHDB Herd Genetic Report to make his breeding decisions and tries to keep the herd’s position within the top 5% percentile on the national average report.

Doreen Anderson, Senior Dairy Knowledge Exchange Manager at AHDB said:

“The fertility-for-life cycle for an individual cow includes calf and heifer rearing; first mating, pregnancy, and calving, then subsequent cycles of mating, pregnancy and calving as a member of the milking herd and eventually culling.

“Attention throughout the whole cycle pays dividends – especially if you can do this for every animal.

“At each stage of a cow’s life, a good management plan provides answers to an important question: today, have I done all I can to ensure high reproductive performance?

“Fertility is influenced by many factors; monitoring herd performance, identifying areas of improvement and how considering selection options can help build a framework to improve fertility in your herd.

“A fertile herd is more profitable, has better lifetime performance and is healthier. It is more productive, calves more easily and when you want it to calve, as well as offering more opportunities to sell surplus animals or increase herd size.

“Improving fertility gives you the flexibility to better manage your dairy farm and herd. Better fertility performance allows you to maximise the efficiency of each individual cow in your system to produce milk.”

Strategic Dairy Farm Programme

When Potstown joined our Strategic Dairy Farm Programme in 2021, their herd’s pregnancy rate was 17.7%. After focusing on improving fertility to hit a target of 25%, they achieved a 27.9% result by changing protocols, looking at the ratio and spending more time with better attention to detail.

As a part of the programme, a steering group consisting of their vet and other local farmers offered support by suggesting new ideas, discussing goals, and reviewing the progress made. Callum from Ark Vets has been instrumental in making a number of changes to improve herd fertility.

Gareth said:

“Working alongside our vet and re-visiting our protocols, we carried out routine fertility visits and routine post-partum checks, synchronising cows not seen after a set period, helping us to maximise our submission rate on farm.

“The additional improvements we made include genomic testing, maximising ventilation in the sheds, improved mobility scores with proactive hoof care, alongside what we were already doing to improve fertility.”

Metabolic profiling

Metabolic profiling has helped Potstown fine-tune tits feeding practices and build a greater understanding of how the herd can produce the milk quality, yield and margins they wish to achieve.

Callum added:

 “One of the key factors that can affect conception rate is nutrition. Back in 2021, we were seeing poor colostrum levels in the calves and wanted to explore if the nutrition was affecting fertility, so we worked with Potstown and Alastair Macrae at the Dairy Herd Health and Productivity Service (DHHPS) at Edinburgh University to carry out a metabolic profile.

“The results identified negative energy balance in the dry and early lactation cows, further leading to poor ovarian function for up to 100 days post-challenge. Potstown now carries out quarterly metabolic profiles, helping them to maximise feed efficiency, positively impacting conception rate.”

Looking at the results, Alastair got a good understanding of where the farm needs to focus attention to ensure they can get the most out of the herd.

Alistair said:

“The fresh calvers are short of energy, but the issue is not a lack of energy in their diet. Nor is it starting with the dry cows. So, the problem must be with freshly calved cow intakes or digestion.”

Over the last two years, Potstown has:

  • Reduced its calving interval from 395 to 373 days
  • Increased its conception rate to first service from 23% to 38%
  • Improved its average submission rate (SR) from 75.2% to 75.9%
  • Achieved an average pregnancy rate of 27.9%, far exceeding their target of 25%

The future of Potstown Farm

The Potstown team want to continue improving their fertility rates. Over their final year in the Strategic Dairy Farm Programme, they are focusing on how to improve their homegrown forage yields and the improvements within their herds through better use of genomic testing results.

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