Farmers have made significant improvements in dairy herd fertility, production, and somatic cell counts (SCC) according to National Milk Records’ (NMR).

NMR’s latest Key Performance Indicator (KPI) report is based on data from 500 NMR-recorded Holstein Friesian herds for the year ending August 2023.

NMR said fertility improvements continue to be made, and since 2010, the mean age at first calving has decreased by 89 days to 804 days (2.2 years), although it has increased by five days since 2022.

The median calving interval is also 30 days shorter than in 2010 at 394 days but remains unchanged since the last report in 2022.  

Conception rates increased by 1% compared to 2022 to 39% and during the past 14 years, they have increased by 7%.

However, the variation remains high between herds, from 32% in the bottom quartile of herds to more than 45% in the best quartile. 

Heat detection has also improved by 11% since 2010 and is now 41%.  

Ben Bartlett of NMR said: “The report’s latest results show the UK dairy industry is moving in the right direction when it comes to cow health, fertility and production.

“Farmers, vets and advisers who make good use of milk records and take advantage of this valuable data to benchmark their herds against the top 25% for key parameters can make informed decisions and monitor progress in the herd. This will underpin the business’s sustainability.

Herd health

In terms of herd health, annual trends in herd health from 2010 to 2023 show that 70% of herds had a SCC below 200,000 in the year ending August 2023, an improvement from 44% in 2010.

In 2023, 52% of all cows in the 500-herd sample completed their lactations without recording a single high SCC above 200,000 cells/ml. The equivalent figure in 2010 was 35% of cows.

Mastitis incidence across a 242 sample of the 500 recorded herds averaged 22 cases per 100 cows/year.

This is a reduction of 14 cases per 100 cows/year since 2016.

In herds with mastitis records, which is about half the herds in the sample, 85% of cows recorded no mastitis in completed lactations, an increase from 79% in the same period. 

Production  

NMR said milk yields have remained stable for the past five years, averaging 8,737kg in 2023, up slightly from 8,708kg in 2022 and by more than 1,000kg on 2010 data. 

Lifetime milk per cow/day increased by 25% from 10.5kg in 2010 to 12.7kg in 2023.

The most significant improvements have been in milk fat and protein in the 13 years that the report has been published, NMR reported.

Milk fat has increased from 3.35% in 2010 to 4.26% in 2023 and is up from 4.18% in 2022. 

Protein has risen from 3.33% to 3.36% since 2022, up from 3.27% in 2010. Â