Author:
PATTERSON D. C.,YAN T.,GORDON F. J.,KILPATRICK D. J.
Abstract
Four grass silages, namely unwilted and wilted silages each
with and without bacterial inoculation,
were prepared on each of eight harvesting occasions during the 1994
growing season (Yan et al. 1998).
The four silages, made at each harvest, were offered ad libitum
to 48 lactating dairy cows in a 2
(control v. additive)×2 (unwilted v. wilted)×8
(harvest (period)) change-over design experiment with
3-week experimental periods. The animals also received 6·9 kg
dry matter (DM) of a concentrate
supplement daily during the first period and then the allowance of the
supplement was reduced by
0·43 kg DM at the start of each subsequent period. The supplement
was based on barley, molasses
and soyabean meal. The data presented are the mean results obtained across
the eight harvests.No significant interactions were found between inoculation and wilting
for silage intake,
performance and silage eating behaviour. Inoculation significantly
increased milk yield (2·4%,
P<0·05) and lactose output in milk (2·3%,
P<0·05) across the unwilted and wilted silages. These
increases following inoculation in general arose equally from both the
unwilted and wilted silages.
However, inoculation of either the unwilted or wilted silages had no
significant effects on silage DM
intake, milk composition, or silage eating behaviour. Wilting
significantly increased silage DM intake
(20·1%, P<0·001), milk yield (2·8%,
P<0·05) and the concentrations (P<0·001)
and yields
(P<0·01) of both fat and protein across the
untreated and inoculant-treated silages. The increases
following wilting derived equally from both the untreated and
inoculant-treated silages. Wilting also
significantly influenced silage eating behaviour with a significant
decrease following wilting in number
of meals per day (6·5%, P<0·05) and an
increase in eating rate (kg DM per eating hour) (29·7%,
P<0·001) across the untreated and inoculant-treated
silages. These results indicate that inoculation
of the unwilted and wilted silages produced similar increases
in milk production. Large positive
responses in silage DM intake and performance were recorded following wilting
with both the
untreated and inoculant-treated silages.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Genetics,Agronomy and Crop Science,Animal Science and Zoology
Cited by
27 articles.
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