Effects of Biotin Supplementation on Performance and Claw Lesions on a Commercial Dairy Farm
- 1 December 2003
- journal article
- Published by American Dairy Science Association in Journal of Dairy Science
- Vol. 86 (12) , 3953-3962
- https://doi.org/10.3168/jds.s0022-0302(03)74005-3
Abstract
A controlled 14-mo field trial was conducted to evaluate the effect of biotin supplementation on hoof lesions, milk production, and reproductive performance in a commercial dairy herd. One hundred seventy cows were studied and supplemented with either 0 or 20 mg/d of biotin by computer feeder. All were housed in the same free-stall facility with the same environment, base diet, and management. The feet of 99 cows were trimmed three times at 6-mo intervals, and hoof health was evaluated. Milk production and fertility data were captured monthly by the Dairy Herd Improvement Association. At the final hoof trimming, sole hemorrhages were significantly higher in control (50%) vs. biotin-supplemented animals (24%). The incidents of cows affected with double soles, hoof wall grooves, and heel horn erosion did not differ between control and biotin-supplemented animals. Biotin supplementation of trimmed cows resulted in 878 kg more milk than control cows when compared with previous lactation yield (n = 46 biotin supplemented, n = 48 control cows). At the end of the study, for both trimmed and untrimmed animals, biotin supplemented cows (n = 81) produced 481 kg more milk and 25 kg more fat than the controls (n = 81). There was no interaction between biotin supplementation and hoof trimming on milk production. There were variations in the response of fertility to biotin between age groups. First lactation heifers fed supplemental biotin had significantly fewer days from calving to conception and required fewer inseminations per pregnancy than controls of the same parity.Keywords
Funding Information
- Swedish Foundation for International Cooperation in Research and Higher Education
- Roche Vitamins Inc
This publication has 29 references indexed in Scilit:
- How Structures in Bovine Hoof Epidermis are Influenced by Nutritional FactorsAnatomia, Histologia, Embryologia, 1999
- Bovine lamninitis: the lesions and their pathogenesisIn Practice, 1998
- Incidence of production diseases and other health problems in a group of dairy herds in EnglandVeterinary Record, 1996
- Incidence and prevalence of lameness in dairy cattleVeterinary Record, 1996
- Relationship of diet, hoof type and locomotion score with lesions of the sole and white line in dairy cattleAnimal Science, 1994
- Effects of lameness on the behaviour of cows during the summerVeterinary Record, 1993
- Ultrastructural observations of hoof horn from dairy cows: changes in the white line during the first lactationVeterinary Record, 1993
- Associations between types of lameness and fertilityVeterinary Record, 1989
- Nutritional influences on laminitis, sole ulcer and bruised sole in Friesian cowsVeterinary Record, 1984
- The Influence of Breed, Age, Body Weight and Season on Digital Diseases and Hoof Size in Dairy Cows3Zentralblatt für Veterinärmedizin Reihe A, 1981