Smith, John F., 1962-Shirley, John E.Titgemeyer, Evan C.2011-05-122011-05-122011-05-12http://hdl.handle.net/2097/9136Two hundred cows located on a commercial dairy in Mesquite, NM were used to evaluate response to rbST (PosilacĀ®) during heat stress in the summer of 1996. Cows were paired by days in milk (average = 153 d at initiation of experiment), parity, and milk yield (average = 92 lb at start of experiment). Prior to initiation of the experiment, all cows received rbST, then rbST treatment was discontinued for one cow from each pair. Milk production was monitored for 4 months. No interactions were detected between lactation number and treatment. Cows maintained on rbST gained .09 of a score (1 to 5scale) less (P<.05) body condition but produced more (P<.05) milk in June, July, August, and September. The average milk productions for rbST-maintained vs rbST-discontinued cows were 80.7 vs 73.5 lb/d in June, 80.1 vs 74.6 lb/d in July, 72.6 vs 67.1 lb/d in August, and 65.1 vs 59.2 lb/d in September. Although rbST-discontinued cows had greater declines in production discontinued cows had greater declines in production persistency was similar between groups during the final 3 months. Under conditions of heat stress, cows maintained on rbST produced 6.2 lb/d more milk than cows for which treatment with rbST was discontinued.DairyrbSTHeat stressLactating cowsThe effects of rbST (POSILACĀ®) on heat stressed, lactating, dairy cowsConference paper