The Preservation of the Effects of Preweaning Nutrition on Growth, Immune Competence and Metabolic Characteristics of the Developing Heifer

Author:

Ockenden Emma M.12,Russo Victoria M.13ORCID,Leury Brian J.23ORCID,Giri Khageswor4,Wales William J.13

Affiliation:

1. Agriculture Victoria, Ellinbank, VIC 3821, Australia

2. Faculty of Science, The University of Melbourne, Parkville, VIC 3010, Australia

3. Centre for Agricultural Innovation, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, VIC 3010, Australia

4. Agriculture Victoria, Bundoora, VIC 3083, Australia

Abstract

This experiment investigated the preservation effects of two preweaning milk feeding nutritional treatments (High: 8 L and Low: 4 L milk per day) on 20, 12-month-old Holstein-Friesian dairy heifers (Bos taurus). A vaccination immune challenge was initially implemented on these 20 heifers at 6 weeks of age and the findings indicated superior growth, immune competence and favorable metabolic characteristics from the calves that had been fed 8 L milk per day. Postweaning, all heifers were treated the same under non-experimental conditions, and the immune challenge was repeated at 12 months of age for the current experiment. Consistent with the first immune challenge, heifers from the High preweaning treatment group still had higher white cell count and neutrophil count, indicating superior immune competence. The differences found in metabolic biomarkers, including beta-hydroxybutyrate, glucose and insulin, in the preweaning phase had disappeared, suggesting these biomarkers were influenced directly by the nutritional input at the time. There were no differences in NEFA levels between treatments at either stage of development. Postweaning, the heifers from the Low preweaning treatment group experienced accelerated growth with slightly numerically higher ADG (0.83 kg/day vs. 0.89 kg/day), resulting in the initial differences in bodyweight recorded at weaning being eliminated by 13 months of age. These results are evidence of a form of immunological developmental programming as a result of accelerated preweaning nutrition and therefore, are not supportive of restricted milk feeding of calves.

Funder

Agriculture Victoria (Australia), Dairy Australia (Australia) and the University of Melbourne

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Veterinary,Animal Science and Zoology

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