Technical note: Method for improving precision of in-parlor milk meters and adjusting milk weights for stall effects

D. M. Andreen, I. J. Salfer, Y. Ying, D. J. Reinemann, K. J. Harvatine

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

11 Scopus citations

Abstract

Milk yield is a fundamental observation in most dairy experiments and is commonly determined using integrated milk meters that measure milk weight as the cow is being milked. These meters are heavily used in a harsh environment and often are not regularly calibrated, so calibration errors and mechanical problems may create artificial variation in milk weight data. Additionally, direct calibration by collection of milk in a bucket is difficult and imperfect because the use of the bucket may affect yield recorded by the milk meter. The objective of this work was to define a method to easily check parlor meter precision and adjust milk weight values for variation between individual stalls in a parlor. Because most cows are milked in a different stall at each milking, it has been proposed that stall deviations that represent the fixed effect of stall on milk weight could be statistically determined. Individual milk weights from 14 milkings across 7 d from approximately 200 cows were collected from the Penn State dairy farm, which is equipped with a double-10 herringbone parlor with an Afimilk 2000 milking system (S.A.E. Afikim, Afikim, Israel). Milk yield was measured automatically by in-line flow through milk meters (Afi 200; S.A.E. Afikim). The effect of stall on milk weight was modeled using a mixed model that included the fixed effect of stall and the random effects of day, milking time, and cow. First, stall deviations were calculated as the stall least squares means (LSM) minus the average LSM to identify malfunctioning meters requiring service (e.g., deviation exceeding 1 kg). A correction factor for each stall was then generated by dividing the LSM of each stall by the average LSM. Milk yields were then corrected by multiplying the meter weight value by the correction factor. To determine the effect of the correction, raw and corrected meter values were compared with weight of milk collected in a bucket (n = 3/stall). The corrected values had a 5% greater coefficient of determination than raw meter values (0.89 vs. 0.84) and had a lower average percent difference from the bucket milk weight compared with raw meter values (12.6% vs. 13.5%). The method was then used in 3 experiments with 121, 140, and 683 milk yield observations. In all data sets, correcting milk weights slightly improved model fit and had minimal effect on model term standard errors. However, this validation was completed in a parlor where the method was routinely used to identify stalls requiring service; the effect of stall corrections is expected to be larger in parlors without frequent monitoring. Stall deviations are expected to be due predominantly to calibration of the meter but also could be due to differences in pulsation or other stall-specific factors that result in a change in milk yield. It is important to account for these other sources of milk weight variation that are unrelated to treatment. Modeling the effect of stall is a simple, convenient, and low-cost method to monitor and improve milk meter precision and functionality and can be used to reduce artificial variation and experimental error.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)5162-5169
Number of pages8
JournalJournal of Dairy Science
Volume103
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 2020
Externally publishedYes

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 American Dairy Science Association

Keywords

  • calibration
  • flow meter
  • milk yield
  • milking parlor

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