5 research outputs found
Genetic and environmental determinants of the urea level in cow's milk
This study was conducted on a sample of 2237 Polish Holstein-Friesian cows.
The aim was to estimate the effect of selected environmental factors on the
level of urea in cow's milk and on its genetic parameters, i.e. the
heritability coefficients, and genetic correlation with other selected
traits of milk production. The present study has revealed the existence of a
highly significant influence of herd, year of calving, parity, lactation
phase, and milk performance level on the urea content in cow's milk. A high
urea level in milk was detected in samples collected from older animals,
both during the winter season and the middle phase of lactation (101–200 days).
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The heritability estimates were generally at a low level, particularly in
terms of milk yield (0.183) and urea content (0.152–0.159), which may
indicate the dominant role of the environment in shaping them. Relatively
low values of genetic correlation (−0.097–0.140) between the urea content
and other traits suggest that improvement of milk yield and its composition
modify the urea level in milk only to a small degree