Literature DB >> 16612022

Effects of dietary nonstructural carbohydrates and protein sources on feeding behavior of tethered heifers fed high-concentrate diets.

A Rotger1, A Ferret, X Manteca, J L Ruiz de la Torre, S Calsamiglia.   

Abstract

To describe the feeding behavior of growing heifers fed high-concentrate diets with different sources of protein and nonstructural carbohydrates, and to explain the ruminal fermentation pattern, 4 ruminally fistulated Holstein heifers (BW = 132.3 +/- 1.61 kg) were assigned to a 4 x 4 Latin square design with a 2 x 2 factorial arrangement of treatments. Two non-structural carbohydrate sources (barley and corn) and 2 protein sources [soybean meal (SBM) and sunflower meal (SFM)] that differ in their rate and extent of ruminal degradation were combined, resulting in a synchronized, rapid fermentation diet (barley-SFM), a synchronized, slow fermentation diet (corn-SBM), and 2 unsynchronized diets consisting of a rapidly and a slowly fermenting component (barley-SBM and corn-SFM). The corn-SFM diet resulted in a lower frequency of feeding (P < or = 0.05), longer meal length (P < or = 0.043), and larger meal size (P < or = 0.037) than the other 3 diets. Dietary treatment had no effect (P > or = 0.09) on the daily percentages of posture and behaviors. In general, heifers spent 9.97 +/- 0.83% of the day eating, 2.11 +/- 0.42% drinking, 25.13 +/- 1.36% ruminating, 16.97 +/- 1.42% in other activities such as social behavior and self-grooming, and the rest of the day (45.82 +/- 2.55%) resting or doing no chewing activities. Eating, drinking, and social behaviors were performed while standing (P < or = 0.01), whereas resting and ruminating occurred mainly while lying (P = 0.001). Eating took place mainly in the first 4 h after feeding (P = 0.001), whereas ruminating occurred mainly at night (P = 0.001). When chewing activities (eating and ruminating) were expressed per kilogram of DM or NDF from roughage intake, more time (P = 0.004) was spent chewing per kilogram of DMI for barley-based diets, and per kilogram of NDF from roughage intake for barley- (P = 0.01) and SFM- (P = 0.002) based diets. Tethered heifers fed the more fermentable and rapidly synchronized diet (barley-SFM) reduced intake and increased chewing time. With these high-concentrate diets, time spent chewing was inversely related to roughage intake.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16612022     DOI: 10.2527/2006.8451197x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Anim Sci        ISSN: 0021-8812            Impact factor:   3.159


  3 in total

1.  Estimating optimal observational sampling frequency of behaviors for cattle fed high- and low-forage diets.

Authors:  R L Dong; G E Chibisa; K A Beauchemin
Journal:  J Anim Sci       Date:  2018-04-03       Impact factor: 3.159

2.  Yield and quality properties of silage maize and their influencing factors in China.

Authors:  Mengying Zhao; Yinping Feng; Yue Shi; Haihua Shen; Huifeng Hu; Yongkai Luo; Longchao Xu; Jie Kang; Aijun Xing; Shaopeng Wang; Jingyun Fang
Journal:  Sci China Life Sci       Date:  2022-01-27       Impact factor: 10.372

3.  Effects of feeding rumen-protected amino acids on the performance of feedlot calves.

Authors:  Mitra Mazinani; Abbas Ali Naserian; Brian J Rude; Abdol Mansour Tahmasbi; Reza Valizadeh
Journal:  J Adv Vet Anim Res       Date:  2020-04-13
  3 in total

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