Production Responses of Dairy Cows Fed Diets Supplemented with Ammonium Salts of Iso C-4 and C-5 Acids
Open Access
- 1 February 1984
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Dairy Science Association in Journal of Dairy Science
- Vol. 67 (2) , 276-293
- https://doi.org/10.3168/jds.s0022-0302(84)81300-4
Abstract
A 3-university study examined the effects of NH4 salts of volatile fatty acids on dairy cows for a full lactation cycle. Objectives were to determine the most efficacious amount and ratio of 2 components (NH4 salts of C-5 acids and NH4 isobutyrate) and to compare responses of this optimum blend with the control in a response surface design. This design tested 6 blends of the 2 components defined by the center point and the 5 points of an equilateral pentagon from which response surfaces would be computed and a control. Each treatment consisted of 23 cows for a total of 161 multiparous Holstein cows. All cows were fed corn silage for ad lib consumption, 1.8 kg of urea-mineral-vitamin-premix plus supplement based on corn grain and corn gluten meal according to milk production. Response surfaces, based on milk yield, defined an optimum blend composed of 61 g NH4 salts of C-5 acids plus 28 g NH4 isobutyrate per cow per day equivalent to 120 g aqueous blend (74% solids). The optimum blend was similar to the center point blend. Cows receiving the center point blend peaked higher and produced more milk, 4% fat-corrected milk, milk protein, and total solids than control cows. For the first trimester of lactation, milk yields for control and center point blend were 28.6 and 31.8 kg. The 305-day milk, 4% fat-corrected milk yields, and dry matter intakes (kg) were: control 20.5, 19.7, 17.3; center point blend 23.2, 21.6, 17.5. Increased milk production was associated with improved feed utilization. No effect on health or reproduction was observed.This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
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