Impact of Dietary Fiber and Physical Form on Performance of Lactating Dairy Cows
Open Access
- 1 April 1986
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Dairy Science Association in Journal of Dairy Science
- Vol. 69 (4) , 1035-1047
- https://doi.org/10.3168/jds.s0022-0302(86)80499-4
Abstract
Two trials were conducted to study the effects of forage intake and physical form on lactating cow performance. In trial 1, four cows in a 4 .times. 4 Latin square were fed long alfalfa hay at 28, 36, 45, and 53% of total dry matter plus concentrate. Total dry matter intakes was not affected by forage percent. Total chewing time and milk fat percentage increased linearly with increasing forage consumption. Maximum 4% fat-corrected milk production occurred when diets contained 27% neutral detergent fiber and 18% acid detergent fiber. In trial 2, four cows in a 4 .times. 4 Latin square were fed diets of chopped alfalfa hay and concentrate in proportions to supply 27.4% total ration neutral detergent fiber. Mean particle length measured with an oscillating screen particle separator of the chopped hay was .26 .46, .64, and .90 cm. Total dry matter and forage dry matter intakes and total chewing were not influenced by forage mean particle length. Mean particle length did not affect actual milk or 4% fat-corrected milk production. Depression of milk fat percentage was prevented when forage mean particle length was .gtoreq. .64 cm. Apparent digestibility of dietary constituents and rate of passage of hay and cocnentrate was not influenced by forage intake or physical form.This publication has 28 references indexed in Scilit:
- Neutron activation analysis of stable heavy metals as multiple markers in nutritional monitoringJournal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, 1974
- Rate of passage of digesta in sheepBritish Journal of Nutrition, 1973
- The nutritive value of processed roughages for milking cattleProceedings of the British Society of Animal Production (1972), 1972
- The effect of the physical form of the diet and the level of feeding on the digestion of dried grass by sheepJournal of the Science of Food and Agriculture, 1971
- Proposal to use time spent chewing as an index of the extent to which diets for ruminants possess the physical property of fibrousness characteristic of roughagesBritish Journal of Nutrition, 1971
- Voluntary intake, digestion, rate of passage, amount of material in the alimentary tract and behaviour in cows receiving complete diets containing straw and concentrates in different proportionsBritish Journal of Nutrition, 1970
- Factors affecting the voluntary intake of food by cowsBritish Journal of Nutrition, 1966
- Factors affecting the voluntary intake of grass*Grass and Forage Science, 1964
- Saliva secretion and its relation to feeding in cattleBritish Journal of Nutrition, 1961
- 460. Studies of the secretion of milk of low fat content by cows on diets low in hay and high in concentrates: I. The effect of variations in the amount of hayJournal of Dairy Research, 1952