Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2439177 | Journal of Dairy Science | 2009 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
The effect of preliminary feed intake on responses to diets containing alfalfa silage or orchardgrass silage was evaluated using 8 ruminally and duodenally cannulated Holstein cows in a crossover design experiment with a 14-d preliminary period and two 15-d treatment periods. Responses measured were intake, digestion, and utilization of N. Cows were 139 ± 83 (mean ± standard deviation) days in milk at the beginning of the preliminary period. During the 14-d preliminary period, 3.5% fat-corrected milk yield ranged from 23.9 to 47.6 kg/d (mean = 36.9 kg/d) and preliminary voluntary dry matter intake (pVDMI) ranged from 14.2 to 21.3 kg/d (mean = 18.6 kg/d). Treatments were a diet with alfalfa silage as the sole forage (AL) and a diet with orchardgrass silage as the sole forage (OG). Alfalfa silage contained 20.5% crude protein (CP; dry matter basis) and orchardgrass silage contained 20.4% CP; AL contained 18.3% CP and 5.6% estimated rumen-undegraded CP, and OG contained 18.8% CP and 6.3% estimated rumen-undegraded CP. Mean N intake was similar between treatments, ruminal N digestibility was greater for AL (30.4%) than for OG (17.7%), and whole-tract N digestibility did not differ between treatments. Intake and duodenal flow of N depended on a treatment Ã pVDMI interaction; both N intake and duodenal flow increased more for AL than for OG as pVDMI increased. Duodenal flow of microbial N and the efficiency of microbial N production from OM also depended on a treatment Ã pVDMI interaction in a manner similar to N intake and duodenal flow. However, treatment Ã pVDMI interactions also indicate that as pVDMI increased and N intake increased for AL compared with OG, a decreasing proportion of the additional N consumed from AL was digested and used for increased milk protein production or body tissue gain. Therefore, when feeding less-filling diets, such as those containing large proportions of legume forage, to high-producing cows, reducing dietary N concentration could increase the efficiency of N utilization and reduce the extent to which greater DMI leads to greater N excretion.
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Authors
J.A. Voelker Linton, M.S. Allen,