Author:
Dalley D. E.,Roche J. R.,Moate P. J.,Grainger C.
Abstract
Two experiments were conducted to test the hypothesis that offering a given
daily allowance of herbage as smaller feeds more frequently than once per day
will increase daily herbage intake and milk yield.
In experiment 1 (spring 1995), cows in early lactation were offered either 40
or 65 kg DM/cow.day allowance of herbage as either 1 feed or as 6 equal
feeds. The latter cows received a fresh strip of herbage at 0600, 0900, 1100,
1330, 1800 and 2000 hours. The experiment lasted 28 days with treatment
effects being measured from days 15 to 28. There were no significant
differences in herbage intake (15.6 v. 15.9 kg
DM/cow.day), grazing time (9.4 v. 9.5
h/cow.day), milk production (25.4 v. 25.2
L/cow.day) or milk composition between the 1-feed treatment and 6-feed
treatment, respectively, during the final 2 weeks of the experiment.
Increasing herbage allowance increased (P<0.001)
herbage intake. Liveweight loss during the experiment was less
(P<0.05) for 6-feed cows than 1-feed cows.
A similar experiment was conducted in 1996 (experiment 2); however, all cows
were offered a single herbage allowance of 50 kg DM/cow.day. The
frequencies of feeding were the same as in experiment 1 except that a new
strip of herbage was offered to the 6-feed cows at 0800, 1130, 1700, 2030,
2400 and 0330 hours. The experiment comprised 2 intensive measurement periods,
the first in weeks 1 and 2 (period 1) and the second in weeks 4 and 5 (period
2). Herbage intake did not differ between treatments averaging 15.2 and 16.3
kg DM/cow.day for the 1-feedtreatment and 6-feed treatment respectively.
Milk yield declined from 27.1 L/cow.day in period l to 25.6 L/cow.day
in period 2 and was lower for the 6-feed treatment than for the 1-feed
treatment 25.7 and 26.7 L/cow.day, respectively. Offering fresh herbage to
the 6-feed cows between 2000 and 0600 hours decreased the proportion of
daylight hours these cows spent grazing but did not change total grazing time.
Despite the adoption of extreme grazing management procedures in the
experiments reported in this paper, we were unable to increase herbage intake
or milk production of dairy cows in early lactation. It would appear that
farmers have little opportunity to increase herbage intake in early lactation
by increasing the frequency of allocation of pasture
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Cited by
32 articles.
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