Theses and Dissertations from UMD
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New submissions to the thesis/dissertation collections are added automatically as they are received from the Graduate School. Currently, the Graduate School deposits all theses and dissertations from a given semester after the official graduation date. This means that there may be up to a 4 month delay in the appearance of a give thesis/dissertation in DRUM
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Item Phenotypic and Genetic Analysis of Reasons for Disposal in Dairy Cattle(2024) Iqbal, Victoria Audrey; Ma, Li; Animal Sciences; Digital Repository at the University of Maryland; University of Maryland (College Park, Md.)Reasons for disposal are defined as why a cow has left the herd during lactation and are documented as termination codes. Dairy cattle termination codes were collected by Dairy Records Processing Centers and stored in the National Cooperator Database maintained by the Council on Dairy Cattle Breeding for analysis. The list of possible termination codes is as follows: code 0 is cow lactation that ended typically without an abortion, code 1 is locomotion problems, code 2 is female transferred or sold, code 3 is low milk yield, code 4 is reproductive problems, code 5 is unspecified reasons, code 6 is death, code 7 is the presence of mastitis, code 8 is abortion, code 9 is udder problems, code A is an unfavorable phenotype, and lastly code B is undesirable temperament. Understanding termination codes is the key to understanding and improving farm management. Unfortunately, the secondary termination codes are not utilized, despite studies saying one reason is too limited. Heifer termination codes should be more utilized, and studies show that this could improve heifer management. The four processing centers' principal termination codes deviated a little from year to year, but processing center D had the most variation in principal termination codes. There were few records with termination codes 9, A, and B. There was low lameness found for Jersey cattle but more fluctuations for their termination codes 6, 7, and 8. Jersey's main reason for disposal was sold and low milk yield. As for Holstein, the main reasons for disposal were low milk production and death. Recommendations include removing termination code 5 (other reasons) and enforcing a secondary termination code for code 2 (sold). Also, including the percentage of animal records used in traits developed at the CDCB was recommended to encourage farmers to add more records to improve breeding selections. Overall, the top main reasons for disposal were low milk yield, death, and reproduction across breeds from 2011 to 2022. To determine whether health traits correlate to termination codes and how health traits change the probability of survival, a multinomial logistic regression was developed, where twelve health traits, breeds, and other factors were used as an independent variable for the termination code, the dependent variable. The output is a regression coefficient list that conveys the effect of each health trait for each termination code. The results show the apparent impacts of animal breeds on different termination codes, such as dairy crossbreeds negatively affecting termination due to reproductive advantages that follow the literature. Lastly, using termination codes as phenotype, this study focuses on developing a genome-wide association study (GWAS) using the Weighted single-step Genomic Best Linear unbiased prediction (WssGBLUP) model to find significant SNPs related to survival in Holstein cows. In summary, this study provided an understanding of reasons for disposal trends, modeled the reasons for disposal, determined the likelihood of termination post-incidence, and found the heritability and important SNPs of each termination code.