With temperatures and wind
chills falling lower than our area has seen in nearly two decades, it goes
without saying that our livestock producers’ job just got harder and hours got
even longer. As if calving season isn’t
difficult enough, cattle producers need to pay even more special attention to
newborn calves.
University of Kentucky College
of Agriculture, Food and Environment ruminant veterinarian Michelle Arnold said
extra precautions would go a long way in helping calves survive.
“A calf’s body temperature
often falls below normal due to a slow birth, followed by a delay in standing
and nursing,” she said. “That is the immediate concern, and then the next step
is maintaining the calf’s core temperature.”
If possible, producers should
bring cows into the barn to calve in a heavily bedded, clean pen. If cows must
calve outdoors, make sure there is dry, clean ground available without a large
amount of manure. If cows do calve outdoors and calves show signs of
hypothermia, or there are no natural windbreaks, producers should bring calves
in until they are warm and dry.
Signs of hypothermia include
shivering and blood shunting. In the early stages of hypothermia, a calf will
show vigorous shivering usually accompanied by increased pulse and breathing
rate. Cold nostrils and pale, cold hooves are early signs that blood is being
shunted away from the body’s extremities. Watch for erratic behavior, confusion
and a clumsy gait. As hypothermia progresses, shivering stops and muscles
become rigid and pulse and respiration slow down. Brain cell metabolism slows
and impairs brain function. The calf’s level of consciousness deteriorates and
signs of life become difficult to detect. The pupils of the eyes will be
dilated and fixed, and it may be hard to detect a pulse. The calf may have
occasional gasps of respiration, and that may be the only clue that the calf is
still alive. Heart failure may be the actual cause of death.
“The two most important
factors in calf survival are warmth and colostrum,” Arnold said. “Colostrum is
a concentrated source of protein, vitamins, minerals and energy, and it also
contains antibodies to diseases or vaccines that the mother cow has been
exposed to. Before you give colostrum, you need to make sure to warm the calf
because the weak ones may not have enough strength to suckle. Sometimes you may
need to deliver colostrum through an esophageal feeder.”
Dark Karo syrup is a quick
source of energy for calves and their bloodstream quickly absorbs it.
Ways to warm newborn calves:
·
Place calves next to floorboard heaters of pickup trucks.
·
Submerse wet calves in warm baths and gradually heat the water to 100 degrees
Fahrenheit. Handlers need to support the calves’ heads to prevent drowning.
Continue changing water out to maintain temperature.
·
Place calves next to the heater in the house.
·
Place calves under heat lamps, but be careful to cover the lamp with a screen
so the calf will not get burned as it becomes more active.
·
Wrap the calf in warm blankets, but not so hot that they burn the skin. Change
the blankets as necessary to maintain warmth.
·
Place the calf in a hot box or warming box, but not so hot that they burn the
skin. Some type of venting is necessary to prevent carbon monoxide and
moisture. Air movement is important to ensure thorough warming and to prevent
hot spots in the warming box.
·
Administer warm IV fluids.
“Once the calf is warm,
provide colostrum and maintain body temperature,” Arnold said. “If the calf is
unwilling to suckle and it’s not possible to milk the mother cow, you should
consider commercial colostrum-replacement products.”
Calves need colostrum as soon
as possible after the suckle reflex has returned, generally within the first
six hours after birth, but ideally within the first hour or two. Once the calf
is warm and fed, move it back to its mother.
Be sure to monitor calf and check to ensure that the calf can suckle on
its own.
These tips do not just apply
to newborn calves, but can be used for all animals. For more information, please contact the
McLean County Cooperative Extension Service at 273-3690.
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