Author:
KEADY TIMOTHY W. J.,SINCLAIR MAYNE C.,FITZPATRICK DEIRDRE A.
Abstract
The effects of level of fish oil inclusion in the diet on grass silage intake,
and milk yield and composition of dairy cows offered either 5 or 10 kg concentrates/d
were evaluated in a ten treatment, partly balanced, changeover design experiment
involving 50 cows in early lactation. Concentrates were prepared to provide 0, 150,
300 or 450 g fish oil/cow per d or 300 g fish oil/cow per d from a premix when each
animal was offered 5 kg/d. The fish oil was predominantly from herring and mackerel
caught in the North Atlantic while the fish oil premix was obtained from a
commercial source and used palm kernel expeller as a carrier. Increasing fish oil
supplementation decreased silage dry matter intake and the concentrations of milk
fat and protein, and increased milk yield and diet digestibility. There were significant
interactions between concentrate feed level and level of fish oil for silage intake and
milk yield. Other than for the concentrations of milk fat and protein, and 20[ratio ]4n−6
fatty acids, the source of fish oil did not affect forage intake or animal performance.
Fish oil supplementation also decreased the concentrations of milk protein by
0·9 g/kg for each 100 g increase in fish oil supplementation, the depression being
similar at each level of concentrate feeding. Supplementing the feed of dairy cows
with 450 g fish oil/cow per d decreased the concentration of milk fat by 15 g/kg. This
study also showed that feeding dairy cattle with fish oil is an efficient method of
increasing eicosapentaenoic acid in the human diet through transfer into milk.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Animal Science and Zoology,General Medicine,Food Science
Cited by
53 articles.
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