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Supplementary Material to: Can a gradual weaning and separation process reduce weaning distress in dam-reared dairy calves? A comparison with the two-step method.

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Vogt, A (via Mendeley Data) (): Supplementary Material to: Can a gradual weaning and separation process reduce weaning distress in dam-reared dairy calves? A comparison with the two-step method.. https://doi.org/10.17632/zfxty2pxd8.1

2024-05-17T12:30:42.230+0200 Vogt, A (via Mendeley Data) 10.17632/zfxty2pxd8.1

Supplementary data to the following publication: Vogt, A., Barth, K., Waiblinger, S. & König von Borstel, U. (TBC). Can a gradual weaning and separation process reduce weaning distress in dam-reared dairy calves? A comparison with the two-step method. Journal of Dairy Science. https://doi.org/10.3168/jds.2023-23809 or https://doi.org/10.3168/jds.2024-23809Abstract The weaning and separation phase remains one of the biggest challenges for cow-calf-contact systems, but a gradual process that better mimics the naturally occurring reduction in milk intake has not yet been scientifically investigated. Therefore, the aim of our study was to compare behavioral and physiological indicators of distress in 3-months-old dam-reared dairy calves (with previous full-time cow-calf contact) weaned and separated either via gradual reduction of contact time with the dam (GR, 1 week half day contact, 1 week morning contact, 1 week fence-line contact before complete separation, n=18) or via two-step weaning using a nose flap (NF, 2 weeks access to dam with a nose flap, 1 week fence-line contact before complete separation, n=18). Behavior was recorded 1 week before (or for lying 3 weeks before) weaning start and during the 3 week weaning and separation period with direct observations on 4 days per week or via accelerometers (locomotor play, lying behavior). Blood and fecal samples were taken twice per week from weaning start until 3 weeks after weaning start. Calves were weighed weekly. Statistical analysis was conducted using (generalized) linear mixed models. Over the whole weaning and separation phase, NF calves showed a stronger decrease in the number of lying bouts, amount of locomotor play and average daily weight gains, as well as a higher increase in total mixed ration feeding time compared to GR calves, whereas GR calves vocalized more often and showed more searching behavior than NF calves. Also, the neutrophil:lymphocyte ratio of NF calves was elevated on day 3 after insertion of the nose flaps compared to baseline, but showed no change for GR calves on any sampling day. Overall, results point towards a favorable effect of a gradual weaning strategy on reduction of weaning and separation distress in dam-reared dairy calves, but the method requires further improvement from the protocol used in our study.

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