The Biologically Relevant Unit for the Analysis of Short-Term Feeding Behavior of Dairy Cows
Open Access
- 1 September 2000
- journal article
- Published by American Dairy Science Association in Journal of Dairy Science
- Vol. 83 (9) , 2057-2068
- https://doi.org/10.3168/jds.s0022-0302(00)75087-9
Abstract
To determine whether visits or meals are the most biologically relevant unit of short-term feeding behavior, we analyzed 209,025 records of visits to feeders by 37 cows. Two feeds were used that differed in protein content. Cows were divided into control groups for the low and high protein feeds and a choice group that had access to both. Daily number of visits and intake per visit were very variable. Cows fed low protein feed had lowest daily intakes, but single-visit characteristics were poorly correlated with daily intake. The probability of cows ending a visit did not change greatly with visit length. Log-normal models were used to estimate individual meal criteria (44.7+/-2.1 min), and visits were grouped into meals. Meal duration (36.9+/-1.3 min) and daily number of meals (6.1+/-0.1) were not affected by treatment. Feeding rate and intake per meal were lowest for cows fed low protein feed. Meal size decreased systematically during the day. The probability of cows ending and starting a meal increased with meal length and interval between meals, as predicted by the satiety concept. Meals are, therefore, a biologically relevant unit of short-term feeding behavior and visits are not.Keywords
This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- To split behaviour into bouts, log-transform the intervalsAnimal Behaviour, 1999
- Satiety Splits Feeding Behaviour into BoutsJournal of Theoretical Biology, 1998
- Effects of bacterial inoculation of unwilted and wilted grass silages. 2. Intake, performance and eating behaviour by dairy cattleThe Journal of Agricultural Science, 1998
- The effect of silage fermentation characteristics on dry-matter intake of steersAnimal Science, 1998
- Measuring diet selection in dairy cows: effect of training on choice of dietary protein levelAnimal Science, 1997
- Eating patterns of lactating dairy cows of three different breeds fed grass ad libPhysiology & Behavior, 1993
- Effect of pregnancy and lactation on liveweight, feed intake and feeding behavior in West African Dwarf (WAD) goatsSmall Ruminant Research, 1991
- Eating behaviour, social dominance and voluntary intake of silage in group‐fed milking cattleGrass and Forage Science, 1985
- Variation among pregnant, non‐lactating dairy cows in eating and ruminating behaviour, digestibility and voluntary intake of hayGrass and Forage Science, 1985
- Eating behavior of beef cattle groups fed from a single stall or troughApplied Animal Ethology, 1981