Results from individual farms were shared with each producer, along with specific recommendations for potential improvements.

November 10, 2017

3 Min Read
Improving Illinois dairy industry one farm at a time
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Like most farmers, Illinois dairy producers want to maximize efficiency and productivity to improve their bottom line, but many don’t have the time or objective perspective to audit their own operations for potential improvements. That’s why the University of Illinois Dairy Focus Team was formed.

“Knowing a farm’s potential causes of inefficiency and efficiency is key to improving its performance,” said Ines Rivelli-Bixquert, a doctoral researcher in the University of Illinois department of animal sciences and leader of the Dairy Focus Team. She recently published findings from the project in The Professional Animal Scientist.

Rivelli-Bixquert worked with assistant professor Felipe "Phil" Cardoso and a team of graduate and undergraduate students in the department to develop a protocol to evaluate dairy operations in Illinois. In the summer of 2014, the team visited 20 farms across the state.

Upon arrival, the group would fan out, evaluating and sampling every aspect of the dairy, while Cardoso sat down with the farmer to complete a lengthy questionnaire and get copies of the farmer’s data.

Specifically, the team evaluated nutrition by taking samples of corn silage, total mixed rations and manure; evaluated reproduction by examining farmers’ data on yearly pregnancy rate, first conception rate and services per conception and evaluated young stock by measuring aspects of calf housing.

Back at the lab, the researchers analyzed farm samples and data from farmers to obtain an overall view of the dairy industry in Illinois. Specifically, data from farms in northern and southern Illinois were compared to pinpoint geographic patterns.

“There were definitely management differences between south and north,” Rivelli-Bixquert said. “Some of these differences were leading southern farms to be more proficient when ensiling corn, meaning that they could have reduced losses and lower costs. On the other hand, northern farms had more proficient feeding management strategies for calves and better reproductive efficiency than southern farms.”

Cardoso explained that the differences might simply come down to climate variations in the two regions. “The other difference is that, in the north, the proximity to Wisconsin -- a huge dairy state -- makes the transference of information easier,” he said. “As extension personnel, we should be talking more about reproduction in the south and perhaps encouraging those producers to visit farms in the north to learn how to obtain good reproductive results.”

Also of importance, results from individual farms were shared with each producer, along with specific recommendations for potential improvements.

Rivelli-Bixquert said some of the farmers weren’t aware of problems before the team showed up. “Sometimes, they thought they needed help with nutrition, but they really needed to focus on some aspect of reproduction. The process helped them to understand their farms,” she said.

Cardoso and the team also used the data to develop a research-based newsletter and online tools for farmers, available at dairyfocus.illinois.edu. He said using farm-collected data to improve efficiency for other farmers is the modern version of extension.

Rivelli-Bixquert added, “I believe that if we do science, it is because there is someone out there who needs it, but it is not always easy to translate it to the general public, and extension is the best tool we have to bring scientific knowledge to the farmers.”

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