Back to Search
Start Over
Biological implications of longevity in dairy cows: 1. Changes in feed intake, feeding behavior, and digestion with age
- Publication Year :
- 2016
-
Abstract
- Milk production strategies focusing on longevity and limited use of concentrate are receiving increasing attention. To evaluate such strategies, knowledge of the development with age of animal characteristics, particularly digestion, is indispensable. We therefore investigated the development of feed intake, chewing activity, and digestion in 30 lactating Brown Swiss cows (876-3,648 d old) and 12 heifers (199-778 d old). We also studied whether age effects were exhibited differently in animals selected from herds subjected for 11 yr either to a forage-only or to a forage-concentrate feeding regimen. Forages consisted of grass hay (the only feed for heifers), corn silage, and grass pellets. Measurements lasted for 8 d, where amounts and composition of feeds, feces, and milk were recorded and analyzed. Ruminal pH data and eating and rumination activity were assessed by pH sensors put into the rumen and halter-mounted noseband sensors. The mean retention time of feed particles was assessed using Cr-mordanted fiber and data were used to calculate dry matter gut fill. Data were subjected to regression analyses with age and feeding regimen as explanatory variables, and body weight, milk yield, and proportion of hay in forage as covariates. This allowed separating age-related changes of body weight and milk yield from independent age effects and correcting for differences in preference for individual forages. In cows, organic matter intake increased with age (from slightly below to above 20kg/d), as did mean retention time and gut fill. Digestibility of organic matter did not show a clear age dependency, but fiber digestibility had a maximum in cows of around 4 to 6 yr of age. Ruminal pH and absolute eating and rumination times did not vary with cow age. Young and old cows chewed regurgitated boluses more intensively (60-70 times) than middle-aged cows (about 50 times). Effects of feeding regimen were small, except for fiber intake and rumination time per unit of intake, owing to the different fiber content of the diets. No significant interactions between age and feeding regimen were found. Heifers spent more time eating and ruminating per unit of feed than cows, which resulted in a high fiber digestibility. Irrespective of the feeding regimen tested, older cows maintained intake and digestion efficiency with longer retention times and chewing rumination boluses more intensively. The results support efforts to extend the length of productive life in dairy cows.
- Subjects :
- 0301 basic medicine
Rumen
10253 Department of Small Animals
Animal feed
Silage
lactation number
Forage
Biology
03 medical and health sciences
Animal science
Fodder
1311 Genetics
Genetics
medicine
Animals
Dry matter
Food science
1106 Food Science
digesta passage time
630 Agriculture
ruminal pH
Age Factors
0402 animal and dairy science
food and beverages
rumination
Feeding Behavior
04 agricultural and veterinary sciences
Animal Feed
040201 dairy & animal science
Diet
030104 developmental biology
digestibility
Fermentation
Rumination
Hay
Mastication
570 Life sciences
biology
Animal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena
Cattle
Digestion
Female
Animal Science and Zoology
medicine.symptom
Brown Swiss
1103 Animal Science and Zoology
Methane
Food Science
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....7075caece71ee5e5e98f24d8755e0001