A key commitment of the Dairy Tomorrow strategy is to "protect and nurture the environment for future generations".
Right now, researchers are making good on that by investigating the role of genetics in reducing nitrogen (N) in cows' urine. If we can breed dairy cows that excrete less N in their urine, we can reduce the amount of N reaching our waterways. That's good for farming and good for our environment.
The research involves thousands of cows on farms around New Zealand. Scientists are developing breeding strategies and estimating the expected reduction in N leaching — potentially up to 20 per cent.
Previous research has shown that, in dairy cows fed N-rich diets, milk urea levels and urinary N rise together. But this environmental correlation doesn't necessarily mean that cows with genetically-low milk urea that are fed the same diet as typical cows will have low urinary N.
And if this 'genetic correlation' doesn't hold up, selecting for low milk urea won't reduce urinary N. In addition, we don't know if reducing urinary N would compromise other breeding worth (BW) traits through other, unfavourable, genetic correlations or improve them through favourable ones.