Invited review: The effect of milk feeding practices on dairy calf behavior, health, and performance—A systematic review

Research output: Contribution to journalReviewResearchpeer-review

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Invited review : The effect of milk feeding practices on dairy calf behavior, health, and performance—A systematic review. / Welk, A.; Otten, N. D.; Jensen, M. B.

In: Journal of Dairy Science, Vol. 106, No. 9, 09.2023, p. 5853-5879.

Research output: Contribution to journalReviewResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Welk, A, Otten, ND & Jensen, MB 2023, 'Invited review: The effect of milk feeding practices on dairy calf behavior, health, and performance—A systematic review', Journal of Dairy Science, vol. 106, no. 9, pp. 5853-5879. https://doi.org/10.3168/jds.2022-22900

APA

Welk, A., Otten, N. D., & Jensen, M. B. (2023). Invited review: The effect of milk feeding practices on dairy calf behavior, health, and performance—A systematic review. Journal of Dairy Science, 106(9), 5853-5879. https://doi.org/10.3168/jds.2022-22900

Vancouver

Welk A, Otten ND, Jensen MB. Invited review: The effect of milk feeding practices on dairy calf behavior, health, and performance—A systematic review. Journal of Dairy Science. 2023 Sep;106(9):5853-5879. https://doi.org/10.3168/jds.2022-22900

Author

Welk, A. ; Otten, N. D. ; Jensen, M. B. / Invited review : The effect of milk feeding practices on dairy calf behavior, health, and performance—A systematic review. In: Journal of Dairy Science. 2023 ; Vol. 106, No. 9. pp. 5853-5879.

Bibtex

@article{63ac4b280e2045739fe56f23fe76940e,
title = "Invited review: The effect of milk feeding practices on dairy calf behavior, health, and performance—A systematic review",
abstract = "The aim of this systematic review was to summarize the literature assessing the effects of milk feeding practices on behavior, health, and performance on dairy calves. Peer-reviewed, published articles, written in English, directly comparing the effects of milk allowance, milk feeding methods, or milk feeding frequency on dairy calves were eligible for inclusion. Outcome measures could include sucking behavior, sucking on a teat (nutritive sucking, non-nutritive sucking on a teat), abnormal sucking behavior (non-nutritive sucking on pen fixtures, other oral behaviors, or cross-sucking), signs of hunger (vocalizations or unrewarded visits at the milk feeder), activity (lying time or locomotor play), feeding behavior (milk intake, starter intake, milk meal duration, or starter meal duration), growth (body weight or average daily gain), and health (occurrence of diarrhea, respiratory disease, or mortality). We conducted 2 targeted searches using Web of Science and PubMed to identify key literature. The resulting articles underwent a 2-step screening process. This process resulted in a final sample of 94 studies. The majority of studies investigated milk allowance (n = 69). Feeding higher milk allowances had a positive or desirable effect on growth, reduced signs of hunger, and increased locomotor play behavior during the preweaning period, whereas starter intake was reduced. Studies addressing health pointed to no effect of milk allowance, with no consistent evidence indicating that higher milk allowances result in diarrhea. Studies addressing milk feeding methods (n = 14) found that feeding milk by teat reduced cross-sucking and other abnormal oral behaviors. However, results on the effect of access to a dry teat were few and mixed. Milk feeding frequency (n = 14 studies) appeared to have little effect on feed intakes and growth; however, there is some evidence that calves with lower feeding frequency experience hunger. Overall, findings strongly suggest feeding higher volumes of milk using a teat; however, further work is needed to determine the optimal feeding frequency for dairy calves.",
keywords = "feeding frequency, feeding method, milk allowance",
author = "A. Welk and Otten, {N. D.} and Jensen, {M. B.}",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2023 American Dairy Science Association",
year = "2023",
month = sep,
doi = "10.3168/jds.2022-22900",
language = "English",
volume = "106",
pages = "5853--5879",
journal = "Journal of Dairy Science",
issn = "0022-0302",
publisher = "Elsevier",
number = "9",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Invited review

T2 - The effect of milk feeding practices on dairy calf behavior, health, and performance—A systematic review

AU - Welk, A.

AU - Otten, N. D.

AU - Jensen, M. B.

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2023 American Dairy Science Association

PY - 2023/9

Y1 - 2023/9

N2 - The aim of this systematic review was to summarize the literature assessing the effects of milk feeding practices on behavior, health, and performance on dairy calves. Peer-reviewed, published articles, written in English, directly comparing the effects of milk allowance, milk feeding methods, or milk feeding frequency on dairy calves were eligible for inclusion. Outcome measures could include sucking behavior, sucking on a teat (nutritive sucking, non-nutritive sucking on a teat), abnormal sucking behavior (non-nutritive sucking on pen fixtures, other oral behaviors, or cross-sucking), signs of hunger (vocalizations or unrewarded visits at the milk feeder), activity (lying time or locomotor play), feeding behavior (milk intake, starter intake, milk meal duration, or starter meal duration), growth (body weight or average daily gain), and health (occurrence of diarrhea, respiratory disease, or mortality). We conducted 2 targeted searches using Web of Science and PubMed to identify key literature. The resulting articles underwent a 2-step screening process. This process resulted in a final sample of 94 studies. The majority of studies investigated milk allowance (n = 69). Feeding higher milk allowances had a positive or desirable effect on growth, reduced signs of hunger, and increased locomotor play behavior during the preweaning period, whereas starter intake was reduced. Studies addressing health pointed to no effect of milk allowance, with no consistent evidence indicating that higher milk allowances result in diarrhea. Studies addressing milk feeding methods (n = 14) found that feeding milk by teat reduced cross-sucking and other abnormal oral behaviors. However, results on the effect of access to a dry teat were few and mixed. Milk feeding frequency (n = 14 studies) appeared to have little effect on feed intakes and growth; however, there is some evidence that calves with lower feeding frequency experience hunger. Overall, findings strongly suggest feeding higher volumes of milk using a teat; however, further work is needed to determine the optimal feeding frequency for dairy calves.

AB - The aim of this systematic review was to summarize the literature assessing the effects of milk feeding practices on behavior, health, and performance on dairy calves. Peer-reviewed, published articles, written in English, directly comparing the effects of milk allowance, milk feeding methods, or milk feeding frequency on dairy calves were eligible for inclusion. Outcome measures could include sucking behavior, sucking on a teat (nutritive sucking, non-nutritive sucking on a teat), abnormal sucking behavior (non-nutritive sucking on pen fixtures, other oral behaviors, or cross-sucking), signs of hunger (vocalizations or unrewarded visits at the milk feeder), activity (lying time or locomotor play), feeding behavior (milk intake, starter intake, milk meal duration, or starter meal duration), growth (body weight or average daily gain), and health (occurrence of diarrhea, respiratory disease, or mortality). We conducted 2 targeted searches using Web of Science and PubMed to identify key literature. The resulting articles underwent a 2-step screening process. This process resulted in a final sample of 94 studies. The majority of studies investigated milk allowance (n = 69). Feeding higher milk allowances had a positive or desirable effect on growth, reduced signs of hunger, and increased locomotor play behavior during the preweaning period, whereas starter intake was reduced. Studies addressing health pointed to no effect of milk allowance, with no consistent evidence indicating that higher milk allowances result in diarrhea. Studies addressing milk feeding methods (n = 14) found that feeding milk by teat reduced cross-sucking and other abnormal oral behaviors. However, results on the effect of access to a dry teat were few and mixed. Milk feeding frequency (n = 14 studies) appeared to have little effect on feed intakes and growth; however, there is some evidence that calves with lower feeding frequency experience hunger. Overall, findings strongly suggest feeding higher volumes of milk using a teat; however, further work is needed to determine the optimal feeding frequency for dairy calves.

KW - feeding frequency

KW - feeding method

KW - milk allowance

U2 - 10.3168/jds.2022-22900

DO - 10.3168/jds.2022-22900

M3 - Review

C2 - 37474370

AN - SCOPUS:85165315620

VL - 106

SP - 5853

EP - 5879

JO - Journal of Dairy Science

JF - Journal of Dairy Science

SN - 0022-0302

IS - 9

ER -

ID: 364545262