Alejandro Saborío-Montero
University of Costa Rica
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Featured researches published by Alejandro Saborío-Montero.
Journal of Dairy Science | 2017
Alejandro Saborío-Montero; B. Vargas-Leitón; J.J. Romero-Zúñiga; J.M. Sánchez
The aim of this study was to determine risk factors associated with milk fever (MF) occurrence in Costa Rican grazing dairy cattle. A total of 69,870 cows from 126 dairy herds were included in the study. Data were collected in the Veterinary Automated Management and Production Control Program software by the Population Medicine Research Program of the Veterinary Medicine School, National University of Costa Rica, from 1985 to 2014. To determine the risk factors for MF, 2 logistic regression mixed models were evaluated. The first model used breed, month of calving, ecological life zone, herd nested within ecological life zone, and parity as fixed effects. The second model excluded first-lactation animals and cows without production information, had the same fixed effects of the first model, and added previous MF case, previous lactation length, previous dry period length, previous corrected 305-d milk yield, and calving interval length as fixed effects. Both models used animal and year as random effects. Of the 235,971 recorded lactations, 4,312 (1.83%) reported MF event. The significantly associated risk factors for MF occurrence, ranked by their highest odds ratio (OR), were parity (OR = 52.59), previous dry period length (OR = 4.21), ecological life zone (OR = 3.20), breed (OR = 3.04), previous corrected 305-d milk yield (OR = 2.39), previous MF case (OR = 2.35), and month of calving (OR = 1.36). The findings of this study are the first data reported using an epidemiological approach to study risk factors for MF in Costa Rican dairy cattle. Some of these results might be used to improve preventive management practices at the farms to reduce the incidence of this metabolic disease in grazing dairy herds.
Journal of Dairy Science | 2018
Alejandro Saborío-Montero; B. Vargas-Leitón; J.J. Romero-Zúñiga; J. Camacho-Sandoval
The aim of this study was to estimate additive genetic and heterosis effects for milk fever (MF) in Costa Rican dairy cattle. A farm-based management information software was used to collect 223,783 parity records between years 1989 and 2016, from 64,008 cows, 2 breeds (Jersey, Holstein × Jersey crosses, and Holstein), and 134 herds. The pedigree file comprised 73,653 animals distributed across 10 generations. A total of 4,355 (1.95%) clinical cases of MF were reported within this population, affecting 3,469 (5.42%) cows. Data were analyzed using 2 animal models, both accounting for repeatability and assuming different distributions for MF event: normal (linear model) or binomial (threshold model). The models included parity as fixed effect, breed and heterosis as fixed regressions, and herd-year-season, additive genetic, and permanent environment as random effects. The models were fit using a generalized linear mixed model approach, as implemented in ASReml 4.0 software. We noted significant regression on the percentage of Holstein breed, depicting a -0.0086% [standard error (SE) = 0.0012] decrease in MF incidence for each 1-unit increase in percentage of Holstein breed. A favorable heterosis of 5.9% for MF was found, although this was not statistically significant. Heritability and repeatability were, respectively, 0.03 (SE = 0.002) and 0.05 (SE = 0.002) for the linear model, and 0.07 (SE = 0.007) and 0.07 (SE = 0.007) for the threshold model. The correlation between BLUP (all animals in pedigree) for linear and threshold models, was 0.89. The average accuracy of the estimated BLUP for all animals were 0.44 (standard deviation = 0.13) for the linear model and 0.29 (standard deviation = 0.14) for the threshold model. Heritability and repeatability for MF within this population was low, though significant.
Agronomía Costarricense | 2014
Jorge Ml. Sánchez; Alejandro Saborío-Montero
Agronomía Costarricense | 2014
Alejandro Saborío-Montero; Jorge Ml. Sánchez
Nutrición Animal Tropical | 2018
Roger Molina-Coto; Allison Masís-Montoya; Alejandro Saborío-Montero
Agronomía Mesoamericana | 2018
Marvin Solano-López; Bernardo Vargas-Leitón; Alejandro Saborío-Montero; Derling Pichardo-Matamoros
Agronomía Costarricense | 2017
Alejandro Saborío-Montero; Jorge Mi. Sánchez; María Vargas-Camacho
Nutrición Animal Tropical | 2016
Marco Barrantes-Chaves; Alejandro Saborío-Montero; Karolina Herrera-Ruíz
Agronomía Costarricense | 2016
Alejandro Saborío-Montero; Jorge Ml. Sánchez
UNED Research Journal | 2015
Alejandro Saborío-Montero; Osvaldo Marín-Taylor; Randall Arguedas-Sánchez; Sinaí Ramírez-Fallas