Author:
Fordyce G.,Fitzpatrick L. A.,Mullins T. J.,Cooper N. J.,Reid D. J.,Entwistle K. W.
Abstract
Summary. Three experiments were conducted in the dry
tropics of north Australia using Bos indicus-cross cows.
Cows in mid–late pregnancy were either unsupplemented during the late
dry season or offered ad libitum (2 kg/day) molasses
with 7.4% urea (w/w) (M8U) or cottonseed meal (1 kg/day) for up
to 54 days commencing 2 months before the start of the calving season.
Supplementation reduced weight loss in experiments 1 and 2
(P<0.05), but had no significant effect on weight or
body condition in experiment 3. Supplementation had no effect on subsequent
calf growth or cow lactation yields.
Following early wet season rains in experiment 1, 9 and 49% of cows
were ovulating 40 and 80 days post-partum, respectively, with no effect of
supplementation. In experiment 2, 10 and 100% of cows had ovulated by
60 and 200 days post-partum, respectively. At any time between 80 and 180 days
post-partum, supplemented cows were more likely to be cycling
(P<0.05), independent of supplementation effects on
weight or body condition. The average post-partum interval to oestrus was 30
days less in cows supplemented for 42 days (P =
0.08).
In experiment 3, pregnancy rates in 1/2 and 3/4 Brahmans supplemented
with M8U for 54 days (MU54) or whose calves were weaned at 2–3 months of
age (WEAN) were 14% higher in the latter 2 months of mating than in
cows supplemented for less than 40 days. Good seasonal conditions resulted in
high pregnancy rates in all mature 5/8 Brahmans; when not weaned early,
their average calving to conception interval (CCI) was 54 days (s.e. =
8.5 days). Pregnancy rates of first-lactation 5/8 Brahmans (average CCI of
125 days) supplemented for 39 days or less and weaned when calves averaged 6
months of age were 14–32% lower between 2 and 9 months
post-partum than in contemporaries in the MU54 or WEAN treatment groups.
It was concluded that dry-season supplementation of mid- to late-pregnant
Bos indicus-cross cows with an energy concentrate for
42–54 days (‘spike’ feeding) may reduce post-partum
anoestrus intervals via a mechanism which is not dependent on the effects on
weight or body condition.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Cited by
12 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献