6533b85cfe1ef96bd12bd4b6
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Time-to-event analysis of mastitis at first-lactation in Valle del Belice ewes
Baldassare PortolanoRaffaella FinocchiaroD. O. MaizonJ.b.c.h.m. Van KaamValentina Riggiosubject
Veterinary medicinesheepanimal diseasesbayesian-analysisselectionclinical mastitislactationBiologyAnimal Breeding and Genomicssurvival analysisAnimal sciencemilk-yieldLactationdairy-cowsmedicineAdditive genetic effectsFokkerij en GenomicaGeneral VeterinaryDomestic sheep reproductionHeritabilitymedicine.diseaseRandom effects modelnorwegian cattleMastitismedicine.anatomical_structuresomatic-cell countsWIASAnimal Science and ZoologyFlockSomatic cell countdescription
A time-to-event study for mastitis at first-lactation in Valle del Belice ewes was conducted, using survival analysis with an animal model. The goals were to evaluate the effect of lambing season and level of milk production on the time from lambing to the day when a ewe experienced a test-day with a recorded SCC greater than or equal to 750,000 cells/ml, and to estimate, for this trait, its heritability and the percentage of variation explained by the flock-year of lambing effect. A dataset with 2468 first-lactation records, collected from 1998 to 2003 in Valle del Belice ewes allocated in 17 flocks, was used. The Cox model used included lambing season and total milk yield adjusted for lactation length as fixed effects and flock-year of lambing effect and individual additive genetic effect as random effects. In total 40.5% of the records were censored. Results indicated that ewes lambing from April to July were at a higher risk of mastitis than those lambing from August to November (conventional season), and that ewes in the highest class of milk production were at a higher risk of mastitis than those in the lowest level. The heritability for the time interval between lambing and first test-day with mastitis was 3% on the logarithmic scale and 4% on the real scale. The proportion of variation, in the time interval between lambing and first test-day with mastitis, explained by the flock-year of lambing effect was 19% on the logarithmic scale and 27% on the real scale; this seems to stress the importance of flock management.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
---|---|---|---|---|
2007-07-01 |