The use of sheep as a model to predict the relative intakes of silages by dairy cattle

Author:

Cushnahan A.,Gordon F. J.,Ferris C. P. W.,Chestnutt D. M. B.,Mayne C. S.

Abstract

AbstractA study was carried out to determine if sheep could be used as a model for predicting the intakes of silages by cattle. Fifty ewes and 45 cows were offered five grass silages unsupplemented in two parallel randomized-block experiments over a 4-week period. Each silage had been made using the same equipment over a range of cutting dates (May, July, August 1991). The silages differed in fermentation characteristics, with lactic acid concentrations varying from 15·3 to 90·7 g/kg dry matter, and ammonia-nitrogen concentrations from 77 to 198 g/kg nitrogen. When expressed on a metabolic live-weight basis, the mean intakes of silages by cows were 2·25 times those of the sheep, with the mean intakes being 35·1 and 79·1 g/kg M0·75 for the sheep and cows respectively. However, there was no significant correlation between recorded intakes during the 4th week of the study by the two species (y (cows) = 0·62× (sheep) + 58·40; r2 = 0·03). It was concluded that sheep were not a useful model system to predict the intakes of a range of grass silages of similar chop length by dairy cows.

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Subject

Animal Science and Zoology

Reference21 articles.

1. Toward a new theory of feed intake regulation in ruminants 1. Causes of differences in voluntary feed intake: critique of current views

2. AFRC Technical Committee on Responses to Nutrients. Report no. 8. Voluntary intake of silage;Nutritional Abstracts and Reviews,1991

3. Demarquilly C. and Dulphy J. P. 1977. Effect of ensiling on feed intake and animal performance. Proceedings of the international meeting on animal production from temperate grassland, Dublin, pp. 53–61.

4. LIAISONS ENTRE LES QUANTITÉS DE MATIÈRE SÈCHE DE FOURRAGES VERTS INGÉRÉES PAR LES MOUTONS ET CELLES INGÉRÉES PAR LES BOVINS

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