Relationships of Efficiency to Reproductive Disorders in Danish Milk Production: A Stochastic Frontier Analysis


Autoria(s): Lawson, L. G.; Bruun, J.; Coelli, T.; Agger, J. F.; Lund, M.
Contribuinte(s)

J. Rice

S. C. Nickerson

Data(s)

01/01/2004

Resumo

Relationships of various reproductive disorders and milk production performance of Danish dairy farms were investigated. A stochastic frontier production function was estimated using data collected in 1998 from 514 Danish dairy farms. Measures of farm-level milk production efficiency relative to this production frontier were obtained, and relationships between milk production efficiency and the incidence risk of reproductive disorders were examined. There were moderate positive relationships between milk production efficiency and retained placenta, induction of estrus, uterine infections, ovarian cysts, and induction of birth. Inclusion of reproductive management variables showed that these moderate relationships disappeared, but directions of coefficients for almost all those variables remained the same. Dystocia showed a weak negative correlation with milk production efficiency. Farms that were mainly managed by young farmers had the highest average efficiency scores. The estimated milk losses due to inefficiency averaged 1142, 488, and 256 kg of energy-corrected milk per cow, respectively, for low-, medium-, and high-efficiency herds. It is concluded that the availability of younger cows, which enabled farmers to replace cows with reproductive disorders, contributed to high cow productivity in efficient farms. Thus, a high replacement rate more than compensates for the possible negative effect of reproductive disorders. The use of frontier production and efficiency/ inefficiency functions to analyze herd data may enable dairy advisors to identify inefficient herds and to simulate the effect of alternative management procedures on the individual herd's efficiency.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:73963

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

American Dairy Science Association

Palavras-Chave #Agriculture, Dairy & Animal Science #Food Science & Technology #Animal Health Economics #Dairy Efficiency #Reproductive Disorders #Epidemiology #Dairy Farm Efficiency #Technical Inefficiency #Panel-data #Cows #Diseases #Performance #Metritis #Cattle #Model #C1 #340201 Agricultural Economics #340404 Cross-Sectional Analysis #720205 Industry costs and structure #720404 Productivity
Tipo

Journal Article