That’s according to University of Sydney Associate Professor Cameron Clark.
He’s leading a program using advanced data science to unlock the value of new and existing data for NSW dairy farmers, as part of the new Dairy UP initiative.
Dairy UP is a collaborative dairy research, development and extension program investigating the potential of milk, cows and water to increase productivity and profitability, de-risk the dairy industry and develop new markets.
Assoc Prof Clark told the Dairy Research Foundation online symposium recently that as technology is used more to monitor animals, the additional data it generates can be further “exploited” for better farm management.
One example is using rumination data to more accurately wean calves to promote better health and production potential.
“When dairy farmers wean calves they have different targets, some aim for a certain liveweight while others wean according to the calf’s age,” he said.
“But really where we think the industry could go is focusing on the calf’s rumen development.
“Maybe achieving a set amount of rumen development thresholds using animal sensors, could be a virtual way of determining when to wean.”
Another way researchers will use existing data, advanced technology and automation tools to improve dairy farm management includes identifying animals that are more resilient.
Pairing 16 million data records, from more than 800,000 cows in the NSW dairy industry, with climate information will help researchers identify cows and systems that fared better during tough climatic conditions.
Assoc Prof Clark said this information would help farmers better prepare for extreme weather events such as drought.
Building on the heat tolerance breeding value created by industry, this NSW work will also examine the decisions made on the farms that fared better during droughts.
Researchers would then help translate these management decisions across the industry.
Work to optimise feed allocations, using existing herd data, will also help NSW dairy farmers prepare for drought.
“The value in the data is being about identifying which animals respond better than others to supplementary feed,” Assoc Prof Clark said.
“With a feed budget, there’s a set amount of grain allocated into milking herds. Within boundaries, we will allow the system to optimally allocate grain to cattle for the best return.”
He said previous research suggested there was a 10 per cent milk yield gain by allocating existing grain-based supplementary feed to cows that have higher milk production responses.
“This work will test the robustness of the model across commercial farms and put it into practice ultimately driving greater profitability for NSW dairy farms.”