| Literature DB >> 22678494 |
Aline Medeiros de Paula Mendes1, Dulciene Karla de Andrade Silva, Marcelo de Andrade Ferreira, Antonia Sherlânea Chaves Veras, Geane Dias Gonçalves Ferreira, Ricardo Brauer Vigoderis, Helton Gregory Santos Arcanjo, Jarbas Miguel Silva, Josimar Santos de Almeida, Anna Christine Alencar Fotius, Glébio de Almeida Farias.
Abstract
The aim of this study was to assess the effect of different supplements on the behavior variables of crossbred dairy cows that were in pasture that comprised two 4 × 4 Latin squares (four periods, four treatments, and four animals). Each experimental period lasted 15 days (10 days to adapt animals to treatments and 5 days for data collection). The animals were supplemented twice a day, with different forage (corn silage and cactus pear) and concentrate sources (soy mea + wheat meal + corn meal + cotton seed together and soy meal as a single constituent of the concentrate). A significant difference (p < 0.10) was observed for the percentage of time spent consuming the supplement and for idleness, rumination, and bite rate at the time of supplementation. The supplement intake period was greater for the cactus pear-based supplements due to the lower dry matter content. Those based on corn silage resulted in longer rumination periods than those consisting of cactus pear; however, the opposite was observed for supplements based on the cactus, which showed higher percentages of time for idleness. The supplementation influenced the ingestive behavior of crossbred dairy cows.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22678494 DOI: 10.1007/s11250-012-0195-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trop Anim Health Prod ISSN: 0049-4747 Impact factor: 1.559