Article
Breeding for Heat Resilience in Cattle: Evidence-Based Strategies for Vets
Heat stress has transitioned from a seasonal inconvenience to a major barrier to dairy and beef productivity in tropical and subtropical regions. Increasing temperature–humidity index (THI) trends, prolonged summers, and recurrent heat waves have amplified production losses and compromised fertility in both Bos taurus and Bos indicus–influenced herds.
Understanding How Heat Stress Damages Productivity
Liver transcriptomic studies show that heat stress induces mitochondrial dysfunction, inflammatory activation and a coordinated heat-shock response, all of which depress metabolic efficiency in lactating cows¹. These molecular disruptions translate into measurable physiological changes: reduced feed intake, elevated respiration rate, increased rectal temperature, altered blood metabolites and depressed milk output, as documented in multiple physiological evaluations²,3.
Epigenetic work further shows that exposure to heat modifies whole-genome DNA methylation, including genes regulating oxidative stress, apoptosis, and cellular homeostasis4 . This means heat resilience is influenced not only by DNA sequence but also by environmental programming, highlighting the need for sustained, multi-generation selection.
The Trade-off: Production vs. Resilience
High-producing cows carry a heavier metabolic heat load, and this makes them disproportionately vulnerable during hot periods. Under heat stress, dairy cows can lose 17–35% of milk yield and 35–48% of feed intake, reflecting how quickly high-output lines decompensate. The earliest losses, however, are reproductive: in Australian Holstein Friesians exposed to extreme heat, conception rates from AI have fallen to as low as 10%, rarely exceeding 55% even under managed conditions. These biological responses support genomic evidence that selection for maximal production has created a mild but measurable antagonism with thermotolerance—an imbalance now visible in both physiology and fertility5,6.
Vet Pearl: Heat hits fertility before it hits milk.
A cow may appear to be milking normally, but her conception rate is already dropping, sometimes down to 10% under heat load. Fertility decline is your first and most sensitive warning that a high-yielding cow is losing her heat resilience.
Practical Insights for Veterinarians
Phenotype first, genotype next
Encourage farmers to maintain seasonal records of milk output, respiration rate, rectal temperature, and THI exposure. These phenotypic markers are validated in multiple studies as robust indicators of individual heat sensitivity2, 3.
Guide balanced breeding decisions
Advise the inclusion of heat-tolerance genomic estimated breeding values (GEBVs) into selection indices, particularly for herds in hot climates. Balanced indices prevent losses in fertility and health while improving resilience⁷.
Use adapted breeds or crossbreeding where suitable
Heat-adapted Bos indicus–influenced lines, or well-designed crossbreeding systems, confer strong, research-supported improvements in thermotolerance².
Conclusion
Heat resilience is now a central breeding target for sustainable dairy and beef production. With genomic tools, physiological understanding and molecular insights become more refined, veterinarians are uniquely positioned to guide farmers toward balanced, evidence-based selection programs. Each resilient calf represents a step toward herds capable of performing reliably in an increasingly warming world.
REFERENCES
- Li G, Yu X, Portela Fontoura AB, Javaid A, de la Maza-Escolà VS, Salandy NS, Fubini SL, Grilli E, McFadden JW, Duan JE. Transcriptomic regulations of heat stress response in the liver of lactating dairy cows. BMC genomics. 2023 Jul 20;24(1):410.
- Chen X, Shu H, Sun F, Yao J, Gu X. Impact of heat stress on blood, production, and physiological indicators in heat-tolerant and heat-sensitive dairy cows. Animals. 2023 Aug 9;13(16):2562.
- Giannone C, Bovo M, Ceccarelli M, Torreggiani D, Tassinari P. Review of the heat stress-induced responses in dairy cattle. Animals. 2023 Nov 9;13(22):3451.
- Yang Y, Chen Y, Hu L, Zhang C, Chen G, Hou L, Xu Q, Wang Y, Li M. Molecular regulation of whole genome DNA methylation in heat stress response of dairy cows. BMC genomics. 2025 May 9;26(1):464.
- Habimana V, Ekine-Dzivenu CC, Nguluma AS, Nziku ZC, Morota G, Chenyambuga SW, Mrode R. Genes and models for estimating genetic parameters for heat tolerance in dairy cattle. Frontiers in genetics. 2023 Feb 27;14:1127175.
- Osei-Amponsah R, Dunshea FR, Leury BJ, Cheng L, Cullen B, Joy A, Abhijith A, Zhang MH, Chauhan SS. Heat stress impacts on lactating cows grazing Australian summer pastures on an automatic robotic dairy. Animals (Basel) 10: 869 [Internet]. 2020
- Cheruiyot EK, Haile-Mariam M, Cocks BG, Pryce JE. Improving genomic selection for heat tolerance in dairy cattle: current opportunities and future directions. Frontiers in Genetics. 2022 Jun 13;13:894067.
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