Breed-environment interaction of native Dutch cattle breeds in agroecological context

ABSTRACT: It has been suggested that local breeds might be more suited for agroecological systems compared with high-input, high-output breeds, such as the Holstein dairy breed. We investigated whether 3 native Dutch dual-purpose (NLdp) cattle breeds and the Holstein perform differently across herd...

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Main Authors: Gerbrich Bonekamp, Mira A. Schoon, Sipke-Joost Hiemstra, Rita A.H. Hoving-Bolink, Jan ten Napel, Jack J. Windig
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2025-06-01
Series:Journal of Dairy Science
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Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022030225002280
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author Gerbrich Bonekamp
Mira A. Schoon
Sipke-Joost Hiemstra
Rita A.H. Hoving-Bolink
Jan ten Napel
Jack J. Windig
author_facet Gerbrich Bonekamp
Mira A. Schoon
Sipke-Joost Hiemstra
Rita A.H. Hoving-Bolink
Jan ten Napel
Jack J. Windig
author_sort Gerbrich Bonekamp
collection DOAJ
description ABSTRACT: It has been suggested that local breeds might be more suited for agroecological systems compared with high-input, high-output breeds, such as the Holstein dairy breed. We investigated whether 3 native Dutch dual-purpose (NLdp) cattle breeds and the Holstein perform differently across herd environments. We compared 490 farms in the Netherlands that had breed fractions summing up to the equivalent of at least 10 purebred NLdp cows with neighboring farms with predominantly Holstein. Herd environment was characterized by 49 farm characteristics derived from national databases and included average animal performance, feed used, soil type, farm size, and use of concentrates and fertilizer. All traits were summarized into 4 principal component axes interpreted as production (levels and intensity), soil and feed use, agroecological practices, and level of crossbreeding. Most NLdp farms had a mixture of breeds or had predominantly crossbreds. Overlap between Holstein farms and NLdp farms was large, but NLdp farms had on average a lower production, were more locally concentrated, more agroecological and applied more crossbreeding. The NLdp breeds varied in this respect, with farms with Groningen White Headed (GWH) being present on more agroecological farms, Meuse Rhine Yssel cattle (MRY) more on farms on sandy soils with maize, and GWH and Dutch Friesian more on grass-based farms on peat and clay. For all traits, we observed a considerable breed by environment interaction, although Holstein had consistently higher milk production and MRY consistently higher protein content across all environments. Holstein had higher milk production on production-intensive farms compared with NLdp breeds, but NLdp breeds tended to have better performance for calving interval, SCC, and milk solids, and consequently outperformed Holstein in some environments. The NLdp cows did not consistently perform better than Holstein in agroecological herd environments. Nevertheless, there are opportunities for NLdp breeds in agroecological and other farm systems, depending on which traits are important.
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publishDate 2025-06-01
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spelling doaj-art-8ab0afd4edf34a4c99733f404ec007262025-08-20T03:13:11ZengElsevierJournal of Dairy Science0022-03022025-06-0110866130615010.3168/jds.2024-25802Breed-environment interaction of native Dutch cattle breeds in agroecological contextGerbrich Bonekamp0Mira A. Schoon1Sipke-Joost Hiemstra2Rita A.H. Hoving-Bolink3Jan ten Napel4Jack J. Windig5Animal Breeding and Genomics, Wageningen University and Research, 6700 AH Wageningen, the NetherlandsAnimal Breeding and Genomics, Wageningen University and Research, 6700 AH Wageningen, the Netherlands; Centre for Genetic resources the Netherlands, Wageningen University and Research, 6700 AH Wageningen, the NetherlandsCentre for Genetic resources the Netherlands, Wageningen University and Research, 6700 AH Wageningen, the NetherlandsAnimal Breeding and Genomics, Wageningen University and Research, 6700 AH Wageningen, the NetherlandsAnimal Breeding and Genomics, Wageningen University and Research, 6700 AH Wageningen, the NetherlandsAnimal Breeding and Genomics, Wageningen University and Research, 6700 AH Wageningen, the Netherlands; Centre for Genetic resources the Netherlands, Wageningen University and Research, 6700 AH Wageningen, the Netherlands; Corresponding authorABSTRACT: It has been suggested that local breeds might be more suited for agroecological systems compared with high-input, high-output breeds, such as the Holstein dairy breed. We investigated whether 3 native Dutch dual-purpose (NLdp) cattle breeds and the Holstein perform differently across herd environments. We compared 490 farms in the Netherlands that had breed fractions summing up to the equivalent of at least 10 purebred NLdp cows with neighboring farms with predominantly Holstein. Herd environment was characterized by 49 farm characteristics derived from national databases and included average animal performance, feed used, soil type, farm size, and use of concentrates and fertilizer. All traits were summarized into 4 principal component axes interpreted as production (levels and intensity), soil and feed use, agroecological practices, and level of crossbreeding. Most NLdp farms had a mixture of breeds or had predominantly crossbreds. Overlap between Holstein farms and NLdp farms was large, but NLdp farms had on average a lower production, were more locally concentrated, more agroecological and applied more crossbreeding. The NLdp breeds varied in this respect, with farms with Groningen White Headed (GWH) being present on more agroecological farms, Meuse Rhine Yssel cattle (MRY) more on farms on sandy soils with maize, and GWH and Dutch Friesian more on grass-based farms on peat and clay. For all traits, we observed a considerable breed by environment interaction, although Holstein had consistently higher milk production and MRY consistently higher protein content across all environments. Holstein had higher milk production on production-intensive farms compared with NLdp breeds, but NLdp breeds tended to have better performance for calving interval, SCC, and milk solids, and consequently outperformed Holstein in some environments. The NLdp cows did not consistently perform better than Holstein in agroecological herd environments. Nevertheless, there are opportunities for NLdp breeds in agroecological and other farm systems, depending on which traits are important.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022030225002280low-input systemsG × E interactionlocal breedsnative breeds
spellingShingle Gerbrich Bonekamp
Mira A. Schoon
Sipke-Joost Hiemstra
Rita A.H. Hoving-Bolink
Jan ten Napel
Jack J. Windig
Breed-environment interaction of native Dutch cattle breeds in agroecological context
Journal of Dairy Science
low-input systems
G × E interaction
local breeds
native breeds
title Breed-environment interaction of native Dutch cattle breeds in agroecological context
title_full Breed-environment interaction of native Dutch cattle breeds in agroecological context
title_fullStr Breed-environment interaction of native Dutch cattle breeds in agroecological context
title_full_unstemmed Breed-environment interaction of native Dutch cattle breeds in agroecological context
title_short Breed-environment interaction of native Dutch cattle breeds in agroecological context
title_sort breed environment interaction of native dutch cattle breeds in agroecological context
topic low-input systems
G × E interaction
local breeds
native breeds
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022030225002280
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AT ritaahhovingbolink breedenvironmentinteractionofnativedutchcattlebreedsinagroecologicalcontext
AT jantennapel breedenvironmentinteractionofnativedutchcattlebreedsinagroecologicalcontext
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