Introduction: Dairy cows are highly susceptible to heat stress, raising concerns about animal welfare, production efficiency, and economic losses. Previous studies suggest that Holstein and Brown Swiss breeds exhibit different levels of thermal tolerance, but their short-term adaptive responses require further investigation. Methods: This study aimed to evaluate breed-specific physiological and productive responses to a 4-day natural heat wave in 40 lactating cows (20 Holstein, 20 Brown Swiss) from the same commercial dairy farm, homogeneous for days in milk, body condition score, parity, and energy-corrected milk yield. Before the heat wave, cows experienced at least 48 h in thermoneutral conditions. Physiological parameters were recorded three times daily (4:00 AM, 3:00 PM, and 8:00 PM). Blood samples were collected before the heat wave (D1, 4:00 AM, thermoneutral conditions) and at the warmest moment of the fourth day (D4, 3:00 PM, heat stress conditions). Results and Discussion: The heat wave negatively impacted physiological parameters in both breeds. Rectal temperature increased daily from 4:00 AM to 3:00 PM (p < 0.01), with Holstein cows showing consistently higher values than Brown Swiss (p < 0.01). Respiration rate reached its lowest point at 4:00 AM each day (p < 0.01) but remained elevated at 8:00 PM, despite decreasing THI, indicating accumulated heat load. While both breeds followed a similar trend, Holsteins exhibited a greater capacity for overnight recovery compared to Brown Swiss. Regarding productivity, Brown Swiss cows maintained stable milk yield (MY) from D1 to D4, whereas Holsteins showed a progressive MY decline throughout the heat wave (p < 0.01). Most blood parameters showed no significant breed differences (p > 0.05), but heat shock protein 70, a key regulator of thermal adaptation, exhibited an increasing trend in both breeds (p < 0.01), appearing earlier than other physiological indicators of heat stress. Conclusion: This study, conducted under identical conditions, highlights distinct breed-specific responses to short-term heat stress. The findings suggest that Brown Swiss cows may be more resilient to heat stress in terms of productivity, while Holsteins show better nighttime recovery. Further research should explore additional physiological and molecular markers to better characterize breed differences and improve heat stress mitigation strategies in dairy farming.

Acclimatization response to a short-term heat wave during summer in lactating Brown Swiss and Holstein Friesian cows / A. Maggiolino, L. Forte, A. Aloia, U. Bernabucci, E. Trevisi, C. Lecchi, F. Ceciliani, G.E. Dahl, P. De Palo. - In: FRONTIERS IN VETERINARY SCIENCE. - ISSN 2297-1769. - 12:(2025 Apr 28), pp. 1582884.1-1582884.15. [10.3389/fvets.2025.1582884]

Acclimatization response to a short-term heat wave during summer in lactating Brown Swiss and Holstein Friesian cows

C. Lecchi;F. Ceciliani;
2025

Abstract

Introduction: Dairy cows are highly susceptible to heat stress, raising concerns about animal welfare, production efficiency, and economic losses. Previous studies suggest that Holstein and Brown Swiss breeds exhibit different levels of thermal tolerance, but their short-term adaptive responses require further investigation. Methods: This study aimed to evaluate breed-specific physiological and productive responses to a 4-day natural heat wave in 40 lactating cows (20 Holstein, 20 Brown Swiss) from the same commercial dairy farm, homogeneous for days in milk, body condition score, parity, and energy-corrected milk yield. Before the heat wave, cows experienced at least 48 h in thermoneutral conditions. Physiological parameters were recorded three times daily (4:00 AM, 3:00 PM, and 8:00 PM). Blood samples were collected before the heat wave (D1, 4:00 AM, thermoneutral conditions) and at the warmest moment of the fourth day (D4, 3:00 PM, heat stress conditions). Results and Discussion: The heat wave negatively impacted physiological parameters in both breeds. Rectal temperature increased daily from 4:00 AM to 3:00 PM (p < 0.01), with Holstein cows showing consistently higher values than Brown Swiss (p < 0.01). Respiration rate reached its lowest point at 4:00 AM each day (p < 0.01) but remained elevated at 8:00 PM, despite decreasing THI, indicating accumulated heat load. While both breeds followed a similar trend, Holsteins exhibited a greater capacity for overnight recovery compared to Brown Swiss. Regarding productivity, Brown Swiss cows maintained stable milk yield (MY) from D1 to D4, whereas Holsteins showed a progressive MY decline throughout the heat wave (p < 0.01). Most blood parameters showed no significant breed differences (p > 0.05), but heat shock protein 70, a key regulator of thermal adaptation, exhibited an increasing trend in both breeds (p < 0.01), appearing earlier than other physiological indicators of heat stress. Conclusion: This study, conducted under identical conditions, highlights distinct breed-specific responses to short-term heat stress. The findings suggest that Brown Swiss cows may be more resilient to heat stress in terms of productivity, while Holsteins show better nighttime recovery. Further research should explore additional physiological and molecular markers to better characterize breed differences and improve heat stress mitigation strategies in dairy farming.
English
heat stress; Brown Swiss; Holstein Friesian; physiological patterns; milk
Settore MVET-02/A - Patologia generale e anatomia patologica veterinaria
Settore AGRI-09/C - Zootecnia speciale
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Pubblicazione scientifica
   Resiliency to heat stress: a system biology approach
   MINISTERO DELL'UNIVERSITA' E DELLA RICERCA
   2022MPWFET_002
28-apr-2025
Frontiers Media S.A.
12
1582884
1
15
15
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Periodico con rilevanza internazionale
crossref
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info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Acclimatization response to a short-term heat wave during summer in lactating Brown Swiss and Holstein Friesian cows / A. Maggiolino, L. Forte, A. Aloia, U. Bernabucci, E. Trevisi, C. Lecchi, F. Ceciliani, G.E. Dahl, P. De Palo. - In: FRONTIERS IN VETERINARY SCIENCE. - ISSN 2297-1769. - 12:(2025 Apr 28), pp. 1582884.1-1582884.15. [10.3389/fvets.2025.1582884]
open
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A. Maggiolino, L. Forte, A. Aloia, U. Bernabucci, E. Trevisi, C. Lecchi, F. Ceciliani, G.E. Dahl, P. De Palo
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/1162036
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