Milk yield and feeding behaviour responses to two flat-rate levels of concentrate supplementation fed over a period of 8 months to cohorts of grazing dairy cows, differing in genotype, bodyweight, or milk yield

IF 1.4 4区 农林科学 Q2 Agricultural and Biological Sciences Animal Production Science Pub Date : 2024-05-06 DOI:10.1071/an23142
Pieter J. M. Raedts, James L. Hills
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Abstract

Context

In most pasture-based herds in Australia, supplementation with concentrates is normally a flat rate, with quantities determined by average cow requirements, rather than individual-cow requirements. Comparisons between flat rate and individual feeding rarely show advantages such as milk yield benefits for either. However, in pasture-based systems little is understood regarding milk production responses or levels of pasture substitution, when different groups of cows within the herd are fed concentrates at higher supplementation levels.

Aims

To investigate the effect on milk yield, feeding time, and ruminating time, of two flat-rate supplementation levels of concentrate, fed over 8 months to 180 cows selected for one of three different parameters.

Methods

Cohorts of cows were selected on contrasting differences for either milk production at the start of lactation, bodyweight, or genotype. Each cohort was divided into two balanced groups receiving either 2 or 6 kg DM/cow.day of concentrate, from approximately 12 days in milk onward. All cows remained part of the main milking herd (total herd size 320 spring-calving cows), with a similar opportunity for all cows to graze pasture or feed on supplemented grass silage during periods of pasture shortage. Milk yield was recorded at each milking and feeding behaviour continuously recorded by MooMonitor+ collars. Results were analysed for three seasonal periods of 10, 12 and 10 weeks (P1, P2 and P3 respectively) commencing in spring.

Key results

Mean marginal milk response (L milk per 1 kg DM extra of concentrate) over the trial period was 0.88 L, increasing from 0.71 L in P1, to 0.92 L in P2 and 1.03 L in P3. The high-concentrate cohorts recorded reduced feeding time per day of 37 min overall (46, 35 and 29 min for P1, P2 and P3 respectively). Significant differences were found for milk yield and feeding time between several contrasting cohorts. The lowest marginal milk response was for cross-breed cows in P1 with 0.18 L and feeding reduced by 65 min/cow.day, with the contrasting cohort of Friesian cows at a larger marginal response of 0.94 L and smaller feeding time reduction of 32 min/cow.day.

Conclusions

The differences among cohorts demonstrated potential for targeted concentrate feeding to specific groups of cows that respond differently in marginal milk yield and grazing behaviour.

Implications

When a significant change is made in strategic amounts of concentrate feeding, the impact not only on marginal milk response should be considered, but also on pasture intake.

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不同基因型、体重或产奶量的放牧奶牛群组在 8 个月内对两种定量补充精料的产奶量和饲喂行为反应
背景在澳大利亚的大多数牧场牛群中,精料的补充通常是统一的,其数量由奶牛的平均需求量而不是奶牛的个体需求量决定。对定量饲喂和单独饲喂进行比较后发现,两者都没有产奶量等优势。然而,在以牧草为基础的系统中,当牛群中不同组别的奶牛以较高的补充量饲喂精料时,人们对奶牛的产奶量反应或牧草替代水平知之甚少。目的 研究 180 头奶牛在 8 个月内饲喂两种定量补充的精料对产奶量、饲喂时间和反刍时间的影响。方法根据泌乳初期产奶量、体重或基因型的对比差异选择奶牛组群。每组奶牛被分为两个平衡组,从大约 12 天的泌乳期开始,每头奶牛每天接受 2 或 6 千克 DM 的精料。所有奶牛仍属于主挤奶牛群(春季产犊牛群总规模为 320 头),在牧草短缺期间,所有奶牛都有同样的机会放牧或采食补充青贮草。每次挤奶都记录牛奶产量,并通过 MooMonitor+ 颈圈持续记录采食行为。对春季开始的 10 周、12 周和 10 周(P1、P2 和 P3)三个季节的结果进行了分析。主要结果 试验期间的平均边际奶产量(每增加 1 kg DM 精料的奶产量)为 0.88 L,从 P1 的 0.71 L 增加到 P2 的 0.92 L 和 P3 的 1.03 L。高精料组群每天的饲喂时间总体减少了 37 分钟(P1、P2 和 P3 分别为 46、35 和 29 分钟)。几个对比组群的产奶量和饲喂时间存在显著差异。边际产奶量最低的是 P1 的杂交奶牛,为 0.18 升,每头牛每天的饲喂时间减少了 65 分钟;与之形成鲜明对比的弗里斯兰奶牛群组的边际产奶量较大,为 0.94 升,每头牛每天的饲喂时间减少了 32 分钟。结论不同群组之间的差异表明,有可能对边际产奶量和放牧行为反应不同的特定奶牛群组进行有针对性的精料饲喂。启示当对精料饲喂的战略数量进行重大调整时,不仅要考虑对边际产奶量的影响,还要考虑对牧草摄入量的影响。
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来源期刊
Animal Production Science
Animal Production Science Agricultural and Biological Sciences-Food Science
CiteScore
3.00
自引率
7.10%
发文量
139
审稿时长
3-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Research papers in Animal Production Science focus on improving livestock and food production, and on the social and economic issues that influence primary producers. The journal (formerly known as Australian Journal of Experimental Agriculture) is predominantly concerned with domesticated animals (beef cattle, dairy cows, sheep, pigs, goats and poultry); however, contributions on horses and wild animals may be published where relevant. Animal Production Science is published with the endorsement of the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) and the Australian Academy of Science.
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