Trends in the Northeast dairy industry: large-scale modern confinement feeding and management-intensive grazing.

This paper provides a summary of results from a recent survey of 987 dairy farmers in 4 northeastern US states. The survey results provide descriptive characteristics of the current state of dairy farming in the region, as well as farmer satisfaction levels, concerns, and plans for the future of their farming operations. The paper analyses characteristics of two increasingly important dairy production systems used in the Northeast. Averages from across the survey states (Maryland, Pennsylvania, New York, and Vermont) show that approximately 13% of dairy producers use management-intensive or rotational grazing and 7% use large, modern confinement systems with more than 300 cows. These more specialized production systems show many significant differences in farm and farmer characteristics, satisfaction levels, and plans for the future compared with farms using more traditional production systems. The changing structure of the dairy industry has potentially important implications for environmental quality, rural communities, and the food system.

[1]  R. Klemme,et al.  Grazing inDairyland: The Use and Performance of Management-Intensive Rotational GrazingAmong Wisconsin Dairy Farms , 1996 .

[2]  R. Berghaus,et al.  Risk factors associated with hemorrhagic bowel syndrome in dairy cattle. , 2005, Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association.

[3]  J. Stokes,et al.  The efficacy of controlling phosphorus loading: the case of management-intensive grazing , 2004 .

[4]  J. Kunkel,et al.  The influence of intensively managed rotational grazing, traditional continuous grazing, and confinement housing on bulk tank milk quality and udder health. , 1992, Journal of dairy science.

[5]  D. Blayney The Changing Landscape of U.S. Milk Production , 2012 .

[6]  C. Ribic,et al.  Grassland birds associated with agricultural riparian practices in southwestern Wisconsin , 2001 .

[7]  A. M. Kjeldsen,et al.  Herd-level risk factors for the mortality of cows in Danish dairy herds , 2006, The Veterinary Record.

[8]  D. Weary,et al.  Effects of pasture on lameness in dairy cows. , 2007, Journal of dairy science.

[9]  W. J. Parker,et al.  A Survey of Dairy Farms in Pennsylvania Using Minimal or Intensive Pasture Grazing Systems , 1993 .

[10]  Differentiated dairy grazing intensity in the Northeast. , 2000, Journal of dairy science.

[11]  S. Brotherstone,et al.  Genetic analysis of locomotion and associated conformation traits of Holstein-Friesian dairy cows managed in different housing systems. , 2008, Journal of dairy science.

[12]  R. Parsons,et al.  A Profitability Analysis of Dairy Feeding Systems in the Northeast , 2000, Agricultural and Resource Economics Review.

[13]  Carmen Sandretto,et al.  Profits, Costs, and the Changing Structure of Dairy Farming , 2007 .

[14]  D. Dillman Mail and telephone surveys : the total design method , 1979 .

[15]  W. Browne,et al.  Cow, farm, and management factors during the dry period that determine the rate of clinical mastitis after calving. , 2007, Journal of dairy science.

[16]  G. Berardi Changing the Way America Farms: Knowledge and Community in the Sustainable Agriculture Movement , 2002 .