Economic values for production and functional traits in Holstein cattle of Costa Rica

cg.coverage.countryCosta Rica
cg.coverage.iso3166-alpha2CR
cg.coverage.regionLatin America
cg.coverage.regionCentral America
cg.creator.identifierMario Herrero: 0000-0002-7741-5090
cg.identifier.doihttps://doi.org/10.1016/s0301-6226(01)00305-0en
cg.issn0301-6226en
cg.issue2en
cg.journalLivestock Production Scienceen
cg.subject.ilriLIVESTOCKen
cg.subject.ilriANIMAL PRODUCTIONen
cg.volume75en
dc.contributor.authorVargas, B.en
dc.contributor.authorGroen, A.F.en
dc.contributor.authorHerrero, Marioen
dc.contributor.authorArendonk, Johan A.M. vanen
dc.date.accessioned2010-06-08T20:02:00Zen
dc.date.available2010-06-08T20:02:00Zen
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10568/1838
dc.titleEconomic values for production and functional traits in Holstein cattle of Costa Ricaen
dcterms.abstractEconomic values for production traits (carrier, fat, protein, and dressing percentage) and functional traits (conception rate, survival rate, body weight, and rumen capacity) were calculated for Holstein cattle of Costa Rica. Economic values were derived using a bio-economic model that combined genetic potential performance, feeding strategies and optimum culling and insemination policies to obtain actual phenotypic performance. Two evaluation bases were considered: fixed herd-size and fixed milk-output. With a fixed herd-size economic values were 0.04 (carrier), 5.25 (fat), 3.95 (protein), 0.92 (dressing percentage), 1.30 (conception rate), 2.42 (survival rate), 0.81 (body weight) and 84.53 (rumen capacity). With a milk-output limitation, economic values for all traits except survival rate were lower than for fixed herd-size. The respective values were −0.04, 3.53, 2.91, 0.88, 0.85, 3.18, 0.51 and 45.59. Sensitivity analysis indicated that economic values of fat, protein and rumen capacity increased significantly with higher prices of milk solids. Other traits were less sensitive to a change in price of milk solids. Changes in price of concentrate did not alter economic values significantly. Under a fixed feeding strategy, economic values for functional traits increased substantially, while those for production traits decreased. The results of this analysis suggest that genetic improvement of fertility, health and cow-efficiency traits will have a clear positive effect on profitability of Holstein cows in Costa Rica, especially when feeding conditions are not optimal.en
dcterms.accessRightsLimited Access
dcterms.bibliographicCitationVargas, B.; Groen, A.F.; Herrero, M.; Arendonk, J.A.M. van. 2002. Economic values for production and functional traits in Holstein cattle of Costa Rica. Livestock Production Science. 75(2): 101-116en
dcterms.extentp. 101-116en
dcterms.issued2002-06
dcterms.languageen
dcterms.licenseCopyrighted; all rights reserved
dcterms.publisherElsevieren
dcterms.subjectholstein cattleen
dcterms.subjectanimal productionen
dcterms.subjecteconomicsen
dcterms.subjectanimal feedingen
dcterms.subjectanimal breedingen
dcterms.typeJournal Article

Files

License bundle

Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Name:
license.txt
Size:
1.7 KB
Format:
Item-specific license agreed upon to submission
Description: