Literature DB >> 25108872

Competition during the milk-feeding stage influences the development of feeding behavior of pair-housed dairy calves.

E K Miller-Cushon1, R Bergeron2, K E Leslie3, G J Mason4, T J DeVries5.   

Abstract

This study investigated how the feeding behavior of pair-housed calves develops in response to reduced teat and feed place availability. Twenty Holstein bull calves were pair housed and provided with milk replacer (MR) and grain concentrate ad libitum via either (1) 1 teat and feed bucket/pen, such that calves could not feed simultaneously [competitive feeding (CF)] or (2) 2 teats and feed buckets/pen [noncompetitive feeding (NCF)]. The calves were weaned during wk 7 of life by incrementally diluting the MR. Postweaning, all pens were managed identically and offered a complete pelleted diet ad libitum via 2 feed buckets/pen (NCF) in period 1 (wk 8 and 9) and period 3 (wk 12 and 13) and exposed to a competitive challenge with CF in period 2 (wk 10 and 11). Feeding times and competitive interactions were recorded from video for 3 d/wk in wk 2, 4, and 6 and 2 d/wk in wk 8 to 13. Meal criteria were used to calculate daily meal frequency, meal time, and synchronized meal time (the percentage of meal time when calves within the pen were engaged in simultaneous meals). Milk replacer intake was subject to a treatment × week interaction, with calves in CF pens having lower MR intake (wk 2: 8.3 vs. 10.0 L/calf per day for CF vs. NCF), but compensating by increasing intake to a greater extent over time (wk 4-5: 13.3 vs. 11.7 L/d for CF vs. NCF). Corresponding to MR intake, meal frequencies and feeding times evolved differently over this period, increasing in CF pens and decreasing in NCF pens (wk 2: 5.8 vs. 11.1 and wk 4-6: 6.2 vs. 5.1 meals/d for CF vs. NCF). Calves in CF pens also spent less time engaged in synchronized meals (28 vs. 51% of meal time; standard error=7.1) and displaced each other 5 times more frequently during synchronized eating. Postweaning, calves in previously CF pens maintained 5 times greater displacement frequencies and had fewer overlapping meals than calves in previously NCF pens (34.5 vs. 40.7% of meals, respectively). Postweaning, when calves were all fed noncompetitively (2 buckets/pen in periods 1 and 3), calves previously fed CF had greater intakes in period 3 (4.87 vs. 4.44 kg/d) and a tendency for greater intake in period 1 (2.80 vs. 2.63 kg/d), greater rates of intake in period 3 (87.8 vs. 72.0 g/min) and a tendency for greater rates of intake in period 1 (44.3 vs. 38.9 g/min), and greater meal frequencies in both periods (11.1 vs. 9.9 meals/d). In the competitive challenge period (1 bucket/pen in period 2), intake, rates of intake, and meal frequencies were subject to treatment × week interactions: calves in NCF pens had lower intake and meal frequencies, but increased meal frequency, intake, and rate of intake over time to a greater extent than calves previously in CF pens. These results indicate that calves are able to adapt to moderate competition by increasing meal frequency and that behavioral responses to competition persist postweaning.
Copyright © 2014 American Dairy Science Association. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  competition; dairy calf; feed intake; feeding behavior

Mesh:

Year:  2014        PMID: 25108872     DOI: 10.3168/jds.2014-8065

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Dairy Sci        ISSN: 0022-0302            Impact factor:   4.034


  4 in total

1.  Social relationships enhance the time spent eating and intake of a novel diet in pregnant Hanwoo (Bos taurus coreanae) heifers.

Authors:  Dong-Han Shin; Hyun-Min Kang; Seongwon Seo
Journal:  PeerJ       Date:  2017-05-09       Impact factor: 2.984

2.  Effects of group housing and incremental hay supplementation in calf starters at different ages on growth performance, behavior, and health.

Authors:  Fatemeh Ahmadi; Ebrahim Ghasemi; Masoud Alikhani; Majid Akbarian-Tefaghi; Morteza Hosseini Ghaffari
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2022-02-24       Impact factor: 4.379

3.  A comparison of indoor and outdoor calf housing systems using automated and manual feeding methods and their effect on calf health, behavior, growth, and labor.

Authors:  Alison M Sinnott; Eddie A M Bokkers; John Paul Murphy; Emer Kennedy
Journal:  J Anim Sci       Date:  2022-04-01       Impact factor: 3.159

4.  Effects of Pair Versus Individual Housing on Performance, Health, and Behavior of Dairy Calves.

Authors:  Shuai Liu; Jiaying Ma; Jinghui Li; Gibson Maswayi Alugongo; Zhaohai Wu; Yajing Wang; Shengli Li; Zhijun Cao
Journal:  Animals (Basel)       Date:  2019-12-25       Impact factor: 2.752

  4 in total

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