Strategic Grazing Management Decreases Nitrogen Excretion Intensity Of Dairy Cows

SCIENTIA AGRICOLA(2022)

引用 0|浏览1
暂无评分
摘要
There is limited information regarding both nitrogen (N) and energy partitioning of dairy cows grazing well-managed tropical pastures. The objective of this study was to investigate the N and energy partitioning of mid-lactation dairy cows on rotationally grazed elephant grass using two pre-grazing targets: 95 % or maximum canopy light interception (LI95% or LIMax) during regrowth. The study used 26 Holstein x Jersey dairy cows arranged in a randomized complete block design with three 40-day periods of sampling. Grazing at LI95% increased organic matter and crude protein intake by 20 % (p <= 0.05) which resulted in a 9 % increase in fat corrected milk yield (p <= 0.05) relative to LIMax. Cows grazing at LI95% had greater concentration of total volatile fatty acids, butyrate and valerate (p <= 0.05), and smaller acetate (p <= 0.05) than those grazing at LIMax. Intake of net energy for lactation (NEL) and NEL secreted in milk were greater (p <= 0.05), while partitioning of NEL towards maintenance tended to be greater (p = 0.07) for cows grazing at LI95% than those grazing at LIMax. Milk urea nitrogen and both urine and fecal N excretion were greater for cows grazing at LI95% (p <= 0.05), but N excretion intensity was lower than in cows grazing at LIMax (p <= 0.05). Strategic grazing management using the LI95% pre-grazing target increases N losses through both urine and feces; however, it reduces N excretion intensity of dairy cows by 9 %.
更多
查看译文
关键词
canopy light interception, elephant grass, energy partitioning, nitrogen partitioning, pasture-based systems
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要