Effect of Forage-Free Diet on the Growth Performance, Feed Efficiency, Blood Metabolites, and Mammary Gland Parenchyma of Prepubertal Holstein Heifers.
Muhammad Ahmad, Shafiq Ur Rehman, Muhammad Zafar Bashir, Muhammad Akram, Arslan Qayyum, Muhamad Naveed-Ul-Haque, Imran Mohsin, Muhammad Oneeb, Ghulam Mustafa, Muhammad Usman Mehmood, Ghazanfar Ali Chishti
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Variation in nutritional profile and availability of high-quality forages remain primary challenges for efficient heifer rearing on a forage-based diet. This study aimed to evaluate the effect of limit feeding forage-free diet on growth performance, feed efficiency, blood metabolites, behavior, health, and mammary parenchyma of prepubertal dairy heifers. Sixteen prepubertal heifers (Body weight = 168 ± 32Kg) divided into 8 pens (2 heifers/pen) were used in a completely randomized design (n = 4 pen/treatment) to compare the effect of a diet containing 20% forage with a forage-free diet. Limit feeding forage-free diet improved the feed efficiency by 10% and ADG by 11.36% (p ≤ 0.05) without negatively affecting the body measurements, health parameters, and blood metabolites (p ≥ 0.23). In udder, three-quarters of heifers fed a forage-free diet had greater (p ≤ 0.05) mammary parenchyma growth than the heifers fed a 20% forage diet. Teat lengths and behavioral measurements except rumination time were not affected (p > 0.05) by the forage-free diet. Heifers fed a 20% forage diet had greater rumination time (p = 0.01) than the heifers fed a forage-free diet. Limit feeding forage-free diet can be adopted in prepubertal dairy heifers for the improvement in feed efficiency and mammary parenchyma growth.
期刊介绍:
As an international forum for hypothesis-driven scientific research, the Journal of Animal Physiology and Animal Nutrition publishes original papers in the fields of animal physiology, biochemistry and physiology of nutrition, animal nutrition, feed technology and preservation (only when related to animal nutrition). Well-conducted scientific work that meets the technical and ethical standards is considered only on the basis of scientific rigor.
Research on farm and companion animals is preferred. Comparative work on exotic species is welcome too. Pharmacological or toxicological experiments with a direct reference to nutrition are also considered. Manuscripts on fish and other aquatic non-mammals with topics on growth or nutrition will not be accepted. Manuscripts may be rejected on the grounds that the subject is too specialized or that the contribution they make to animal physiology and nutrition is insufficient.
In addition, reviews on topics of current interest within the scope of the journal are welcome. Authors are advised to send an outline to the Editorial Office for approval prior to submission.