Parity of Calving Influences the Likelihood of Calves Having Cryptosporidium spp.

The effect of colostrum on calves’ health status was intensively studied, while the role of transition milk was left underestimated. The common practice is to feed calves with an adequate amount of colostrum immediately after calving and soon after feeding calves are weaned from dams. In this resear...

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Main Authors: Alīna Zolova, Dace Keidāne, Maksims Zolovs
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2022-01-01
Series:Veterinary Medicine International
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2022/3306052
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author Alīna Zolova
Dace Keidāne
Maksims Zolovs
author_facet Alīna Zolova
Dace Keidāne
Maksims Zolovs
author_sort Alīna Zolova
collection DOAJ
description The effect of colostrum on calves’ health status was intensively studied, while the role of transition milk was left underestimated. The common practice is to feed calves with an adequate amount of colostrum immediately after calving and soon after feeding calves are weaned from dams. In this research, calves were not weaned from dams for at least 2 weeks receiving both colostrum and transition milk on demand. Thus, we have recreated natural feeding conditions for calves’ development. We used a stratified sample method to test whether the size of the dairy cattle farms, breed, parity number, season of calving, and length of the dry period affect the likelihood of calves’ infection with Cryptosporidium spp. considering these factors influence both colostrum and transition milk quality. The main results showed that 26.1% of calves were positive for the presence of Cryptosporidium spp. oocysts. The presence of clinical signs of diarrhea was recorded in 15% of the positive animals. Regression analysis showed that multiparous cows decrease the chance of calves to have Cryptosporidium spp. by 82%–89%, while cows calved on small farms decrease the chance of calves to have Cryptosporidium spp. by 80%. We suggest that primiparous cows are spending inner resources primarily on their maturation, thereby leaving the prerequisites for the infection of their offspring, while intense farming just increases the chance of unprotected calves to obtain infections.
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institution Kabale University
issn 2042-0048
language English
publishDate 2022-01-01
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record_format Article
series Veterinary Medicine International
spelling doaj-art-c64190fef991418e80a3317e479202a92025-02-03T05:59:03ZengWileyVeterinary Medicine International2042-00482022-01-01202210.1155/2022/3306052Parity of Calving Influences the Likelihood of Calves Having Cryptosporidium spp.Alīna Zolova0Dace Keidāne1Maksims Zolovs2Institute of Food and Environmental HygieneInstitute of Food and Environmental HygieneDepartment of BiosystematicsThe effect of colostrum on calves’ health status was intensively studied, while the role of transition milk was left underestimated. The common practice is to feed calves with an adequate amount of colostrum immediately after calving and soon after feeding calves are weaned from dams. In this research, calves were not weaned from dams for at least 2 weeks receiving both colostrum and transition milk on demand. Thus, we have recreated natural feeding conditions for calves’ development. We used a stratified sample method to test whether the size of the dairy cattle farms, breed, parity number, season of calving, and length of the dry period affect the likelihood of calves’ infection with Cryptosporidium spp. considering these factors influence both colostrum and transition milk quality. The main results showed that 26.1% of calves were positive for the presence of Cryptosporidium spp. oocysts. The presence of clinical signs of diarrhea was recorded in 15% of the positive animals. Regression analysis showed that multiparous cows decrease the chance of calves to have Cryptosporidium spp. by 82%–89%, while cows calved on small farms decrease the chance of calves to have Cryptosporidium spp. by 80%. We suggest that primiparous cows are spending inner resources primarily on their maturation, thereby leaving the prerequisites for the infection of their offspring, while intense farming just increases the chance of unprotected calves to obtain infections.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2022/3306052
spellingShingle Alīna Zolova
Dace Keidāne
Maksims Zolovs
Parity of Calving Influences the Likelihood of Calves Having Cryptosporidium spp.
Veterinary Medicine International
title Parity of Calving Influences the Likelihood of Calves Having Cryptosporidium spp.
title_full Parity of Calving Influences the Likelihood of Calves Having Cryptosporidium spp.
title_fullStr Parity of Calving Influences the Likelihood of Calves Having Cryptosporidium spp.
title_full_unstemmed Parity of Calving Influences the Likelihood of Calves Having Cryptosporidium spp.
title_short Parity of Calving Influences the Likelihood of Calves Having Cryptosporidium spp.
title_sort parity of calving influences the likelihood of calves having cryptosporidium spp
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2022/3306052
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AT dacekeidane parityofcalvinginfluencesthelikelihoodofcalveshavingcryptosporidiumspp
AT maksimszolovs parityofcalvinginfluencesthelikelihoodofcalveshavingcryptosporidiumspp