fbpx
Print this page
Tuesday, 23 October 2012 16:18

No problem in cold stored colostrum

Written by 

A STUDY looking at the wider implications of cold storing colostrum has given the practice a preliminary all clear.

The Texas A&M University AgriLife Research and University of Florida report notes most studies analyse the effect of refrigeration or freezing on preservation of immunoglobulins, but the impact of such storage on other immunological factors had been unclear.

“Passive transfer of immunoglobulins is the key element; however, colostrum also is an important source of nutrients, non-specific immune factors and biologically active compounds,” explains AgriLife Research ruminant animal health scientist Pablo Pinedo, one of the report authors.

Pinedo and University of Florida professor Arthur Donovan looked for differences in health in 489 Holstein Friesian calves fed fresh, refrigerated or frozen colostrum from birth. Each calf was monitored for survival, number and length of illnesses, and average daily gain.

“The objective was to assess the performance, health and survival of calves fed fresh colostrum from their dams compared to calves receiving colostrum that was not from their dams and had been treated with potassium sorbate preservative and stored frozen or refrigerated,” says Pinedo.

Preliminary results indicate colostrums origin – fresh maternal versus stored – does not have a significant effect on performance, health and survival.

“This is good news: proper colostrum storage is a very convenient tool in dairy farms and the absence of unfavorable effects on frozen or refrigerated colostrum would be a very good result.”

Featured

Fencing excellence celebrated

The Fencing Contractors Association of New Zealand (FCANZ) celebrated the best of the best at the 2025 Fencing Industry Awards, providing the opportunity to honour both rising talent and industry stalwarts.

B+LNZ launches AI assistant for farmers

Beef + Lamb New Zealand has launched an AI-powered digital assistant to help farmers using the B+LNZ Knowledge Hub to create tailored answers and resources for their farming businesses.

National

Machinery & Products

Tech might take time

Agritech Unleashed – a one-day event held recently at Mystery Creek, near Hamilton – focused on technology as an ‘enabler’…

John Deere acquires GUSS Automation

John Deere has announced the full acquisition of GUSS Automation, LLC, a globally recognised leader in supervised high-value crop autonomy,…

Fencing excellence celebrated

The Fencing Contractors Association of New Zealand (FCANZ) celebrated the best of the best at the 2025 Fencing Industry Awards,…