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Feed efficiency of lactating Holstein cows is repeatable within diet but less reproducible when changing dietary starch and forage concentrations

Fischer, A; Dai, X; Kalscheur, KF

Authors

A Fischer

X Dai

KF Kalscheur



Abstract

Improving feed efficiency has become an important target for dairy farmers to produce more milk with fewer feed resources. With decreasing availability of arable land to produce feeds that are edible for human consumption, it will be important to increase the proportion of feeds in the diets for dairy cattle that are less edible for human consumption. The current research analyzed the ability of lactating dairy cows to maintain their feed efficiency when switching between a high starch diet (HS diet: 27% starch, 29% NDF, 47.1% forages on a DM basis) and a low starch diet (LS diet: 13% starch, 37% NDF, 66.4% forages on a DM basis). Sixty-two lactating Holstein cows (137 +/- 23 days in milk (DIM) at the start of experi-ment), of which 29 were primiparous cows, were utilized in a crossover design with two 70-d experimen-tal periods, including a 14-d adaption period for each. Feed efficiency was estimated as the individual deviation from the population average intercept in a mixed model predicting DM intake (DMI) with net energy in milk, maintenance and BW gain and loss. Repeatability was estimated within each diet by comparing feed efficiency estimated over the first 28-day period and the second 28-day period within each diet, using Pearson's and intraclass correlations, and the estimation of error of repeatability. Similarly, reproducibility was estimated by comparing the second 28-day period of one diet with the first 28-day period of the other diet. Feed efficiency was less reproducible across diets than repeatable within the same diet. This was shown by lower intraclass correlations (0.399) across diets compared to that in the HS diet (0.587) and LS diet (0.806), as well as a lower Pearson's correlation coefficient (0.418) across diets compared to that in the HS diet (0.630) and LS diet (0.809). In addition, the estimation of error of repeatability was higher (0.830 kg DM/d) across diets compared to that in the HS diet (0.761 kg DM/d) and LS diet (0.504 kg DM/d). This means that the feed efficiency of dairy cows is more likely to change after a diet change than over subsequent lactation stages. Other determinants, such as digestive pro-cesses, need to be further investigated to determine its effects on estimating feed efficiency. Published by Elsevier B.V. on behalf of The Animal Consortium. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).

Citation

Fischer, A., Dai, X., & Kalscheur, K. (2022). Feed efficiency of lactating Holstein cows is repeatable within diet but less reproducible when changing dietary starch and forage concentrations. animal, 16(8), https://doi.org/10.1016/j.animal.2022.100599

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Jun 16, 2022
Online Publication Date Aug 1, 2022
Publication Date 2022
Deposit Date Aug 8, 2023
Publicly Available Date Aug 8, 2023
Print ISSN 1751-7311
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 16
Issue 8
DOI https://doi.org/10.1016/j.animal.2022.100599
Keywords residual feed intake; repeatability; reproducibility; dairy cattle; mixed model; GROWTH; DIGESTIBILITY; PERFORMANCE; PROTEIN; PERIOD; STAGE; FAT

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