Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2454651 The Professional Animal Scientist 2007 12 Pages PDF
Abstract
Six trials were conducted to evaluate the performance of 292 Holstein bull calves (40 to 43 kg average initial BW; less than 7 d old) fed starters with various CP, rumen undegraded protein (RUP), and metabolizable protein (MP) concentrations. Calves were fed either 20% CP and 20% fat milk replacers (MR) at 454 g/d or 26% CP and 17% fat MR at 680 g/d and weaned at either 28 or 42 d. Starter and water was fed free-choice and measurements collected for 56 d. Trials 1, 2, 3, and 4 compared CP concentrations from 15 to 26% CP (as-fed basis). Trial 5 compared 18% CP starters with either A) low RUP, low MP or B) high RUP, high MP that had similar amino acid concentrations. Trial 6 compared A) a control starter, B) a high MP starter, and C) a high MP starter with equal rumen degradable protein as Starter A. There were no differences (P > 0.10) among treatments for any measurements in trials 1, 3, 4, 5, and 6 when starters that were 18% CP or greater were fed or when RUP and MP were altered. In trial 2, the effects of increasing starter CP from 15 to 21% were quadratic (P < 0.05) from 0 to 56 d, indicating 15% CP was inadequate. Also in trial 2, calves weaned at 28 d consumed more starter from 0 to 56 d, but ADG were not different (P > 0.15) than for calves weaned at 42 d. All 6 trials were simulated using the NRC (2001) calf submodel. In each case, energy, not CP, was predicted to limit gains, and observed gains were 109 to 138% of model predictions. Calf ADG, intake, efficiency, hip width change, or body condition score change did not improve when calves were fed starter with more than 18% CP when fed as either a conventional 20% CP, 20% fat MR fed at 454 g/d or a 26% CP, 17% fat MR fed at 680 g/d.
Related Topics
Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Animal Science and Zoology
Authors
, , , ,