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Effect of feeding intensity and milking system on nutritionally relevant milk components in dairy farming systems in the North East of England

Authors :
Chris J. Seal
Mick Eyre
Tina Slots
Carlo Leifert
Sokratis Stergiadis
Håvard Steinshamn
Jacob Holm Nielsen
Mette Krogh Larsen
Gillian Butler
Source :
Stergiadis, S, Leifert, C, Seal, C J, Eyre, M D, Nielsen, J H, Larsen, M K, Slots, T & Steinshamn, H 2012, ' Effect of Feeding Intensity and Milking System on Nutritionally Relevant Milk Components in Dairy Farming Systems in the North East of England ', Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, vol. 60, no. 29, pp. 7270-7281 . https://doi.org/10.1021/jf301053b
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

There is increasing concern that the intensification of dairy production reduces the concentrations of nutritionallydesirable compounds in milk. This study therefore compared important quality parameters (protein and fatty acid profiles; α-tocopherol and carotenoid concentrations) in milk from four dairy systems with contrasting production intensities (in terms offeeding regimens and milking systems). The concentrations of several nutritionally desirable compounds (β-lactoglobulin, omega-3 fatty acids, omega-3/omega-6 ratio, conjugated linoleic acid c9t11, and/or carotenoids) decreased with increasing feeding intensity (organic outdoor ≥ conventional outdoor ≥ conventional indoors). Milking system intensification (use of robotic milking parlors) had a more limited effect on milk composition, but increased mastitis incidence. Multivariate analyses indicated that differences in milk quality were mainly linked to contrasting feeding regimens and that milking system and breedchoice also contributed to differences in milk composition between production systems.

Details

ISSN :
15205118
Volume :
60
Issue :
29
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of agricultural and food chemistry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....054688678beb25184dc239b5d0a00d38
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/jf301053b