1. Evaluation of lactating dairy cattle performance when fed plant botanicals in a commercial fleld setting.
- Author
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Daniels, K. J., Dunn, J. L., Doane, P. H., and Cecava, M. J.
- Subjects
DAIRY cattle ,MILK yield ,MILKFAT ,FAT content of milk ,MILK proteins ,FORAGE plants ,DAIRY farm management - Abstract
Our objective was to evaluate the effects of speciflc plant botanicals on performance of lactating dairy cows in commercial settings under different management and forage conditions. Holstein cows (n = 173) were allotted to treatment in a completely randomized design on four herds in Pennsylvania and were fed standard lactation diets for 30 days before treatments were applied. Cows were housed in tie stalls and fed individually. The standard lactation diet served as the control (CTL), while the treatment diet (TRT) had an additional 56 g/cow/d of a speciflc blend of botanicals (RumeNext D™; ADM Alliance Nutrition, Inc., Quincy, IL). The TRT was fed for 60 days. Individual parameters for intake and production produced grouped means from repeated measures. Milk yield improved by 1.2 kg/d (P<0.5) for TRT. There were trends (P<0.13) for decreased milk fat and protein content when TRT was fed. However, milk fat (P<0.30) and protein (P<0.10) yield tended to increase because of increased milk yield. On a farm-speciflc basis, Farm C had a decrease (P<0.05) in milk fat content, but there tended to be increases (P<0.15) in total milk and milk protein yields for TRT. There were positive responses (P<0.10) to TRT for milk, fat-corrected milk and fat yield at Farm D, as well as a tendency (P<0.11) for increased protein yield. Both Farms A and B recorded numeric performance beneflts for TRT. Results indicate that there may be farm-speciflc interactions with plant botanicals including management, basal diet, or production level. Plant botanicals may beneflt performance of lactating cattle through a potential increase in milk and fat yield. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006