Effects of Heat Stress in Dairy Cows Offered Diets Containing Either Wheat or Corn Grain during Late Lactation

被引:4
|
作者
Garner, Josie B. [1 ]
Williams, S. Richard O. [1 ]
Moate, Peter J. [1 ,2 ]
Jacobs, Joe L. [1 ,2 ]
Hannah, Murray C. [1 ]
Morris, Greg L. [1 ]
Wales, William J. [1 ,2 ]
Marett, Leah C. [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Agr Victoria Res, Ellinbank, Vic 3821, Australia
[2] Univ Melbourne, Sch Agr & Food, Fac Vet & Agr Sci, Ctr Agr Innovat, Parkville, Vic 3010, Australia
来源
ANIMALS | 2022年 / 12卷 / 16期
关键词
heat stress; milk production; ruminant nutrition; dairy cows; DRY-MATTER; MILK-YIELD; TEMPERATURE; PROTEIN; METABOLISM; AMELIORATE; NUTRITION; RESPONSES; CATTLE;
D O I
10.3390/ani12162031
中图分类号
S8 [畜牧、 动物医学、狩猎、蚕、蜂];
学科分类号
0905 ;
摘要
Simple Summary A common nutritional strategy to reduce heat stress on dairy cows is to provide a more slowly degradable starch source that reduces the amount of heat generated during digestion. The aim of this experiment was to investigate the responses of late lactation dairy cows to cereal grain-based diets in a short-term heat challenge. Cows were offered a diet of alfalfa hay supplemented with either wheat grain (fast rumen degradable) or corn grain (slow rumen degradable). Individual cow measurements of feed intake, milk yield and composition, respiration rate, and body temperature were taken daily before, during and after a 4-day heat challenge, during which the cows were in individual controlled-climate chambers and exposed to air temperature up to 33 degrees C with 50% relative humidity. While exposed to the heat challenge during late lactation, cows that were offered corn grain had greater feed intake and tended to produce more energy-corrected milk but had lower respiration rates and similar body temperature to the cows offered wheat grain. The economic impact of feeding corn in place of wheat grain needs to be assessed before any comparative value of feeding corn grain or wheat grain can be determined. Cereal grains that differ in the rate and extent of ruminal fermentation differ in heat increment and may be used to improve thermoregulation during heat stress. This experiment investigated the responses of dairy cows in late lactation to a heat challenge when offered wheat-grain or corn-grain. Eighteen lactating cows, 220 +/- 94 (mean +/- standard deviation) days in milk, 3.7 +/- 0.17 years of age and 558 +/- 37 kg bodyweight, were allocated treatments containing 6 kg dry matter (DM)/day of wheat grain or 6 kg DM/day corn grain (9 per treatment) plus 14 kg DM/day of alfalfa hay. Measurements were made during a 7-day pre-challenge period at ambient conditions in individual stalls, during a 4-day heat challenge (temperature humidity index of 74 to 84) in individual controlled-climate chambers, then during a 7-day recovery period at ambient conditions in individual stalls. During the heat challenge, cows offered corn had lower respiration rates (p = 0.017) and greater feed intake (p = 0.021) but energy-corrected milk (p = 0.097) was not different to that of cows offered wheat. Feeding corn grain to dairy cows during a heat challenge reduced some of the negative impacts of heat stress, enabling the cows to consume more forage compared with supplementing with wheat grain.
引用
收藏
页数:17
相关论文
共 49 条
  • [21] Effects of fermented Chinese herbal medicines on milk performance and immune function in late-lactation cows under heat stress conditions
    Shan, Chun-Hua
    Guo, Jianjun
    Sun, Xinsheng
    Li, Nan
    Yang, Xinyu
    Gao, Yuhong
    Qiu, Dianrui
    Li, Xuemei
    Wang, Yanan
    Feng, Man
    Wang, Chao
    Zhao, JuanJuan
    JOURNAL OF ANIMAL SCIENCE, 2018, 96 (10) : 4444 - 4457
  • [22] Invited review: Heat stress effects during late gestation on dry cows and their calves
    Tao, S.
    Dahl, G. E.
    JOURNAL OF DAIRY SCIENCE, 2013, 96 (07) : 4079 - 4093
  • [23] Herbage intake and milk production of late-lactation dairy cows offered a second-year chicory crop during summer
    Muir, S. K.
    Ward, G. N.
    Jacobs, J. L.
    JOURNAL OF DAIRY SCIENCE, 2015, 98 (12) : 8825 - 8835
  • [24] Across-generation effects of maternal heat stress during late gestation on production, female fertility and longevity traits in dairy cows
    Kipp, Cordula
    Bruegemann, Kerstin
    Zieger, Peter
    Muetze, Katja
    Moecklinghoff-Wicke, Sibylle
    Koenig, Sven
    Halli, Kathrin
    JOURNAL OF DAIRY RESEARCH, 2021, 88 (02) : 147 - 153
  • [25] Effects of rumen-protected choline supplementation in Holstein dairy cows during electric heat blanket-induced heat stress
    Holdorf, H. T.
    White, H. M.
    JOURNAL OF DAIRY SCIENCE, 2021, 104 (09) : 9715 - 9725
  • [26] Effects of a controlled heat stress during late gestation, lactation, and after weaning on thermoregulation, metabolism, and reproduction of primiparous sows
    Williams, A. M.
    Safranski, T. J.
    Spiers, D. E.
    Eichen, P. A.
    Coate, E. A.
    Lucy, M. C.
    JOURNAL OF ANIMAL SCIENCE, 2013, 91 (06) : 2700 - 2714
  • [27] Effects of replacement of corn silage and distillers' grain diets with hay during prepartum on the health and production performance of dairy heifers postpartum
    Luo, Zhengzhong
    Yong, Kang
    Huang, Yixin
    Zhang, Chuanshi
    Shen, Liuhong
    Jiang, Hua
    Yang, Xiao
    Zhang, Yong
    Cao, Suizhong
    JOURNAL OF ANIMAL PHYSIOLOGY AND ANIMAL NUTRITION, 2022, 106 (03) : 682 - 689
  • [28] Effects of Supplemental Levels of Saccharomyces cerevisiae Fermentation Product on Lactation Performance in Dairy Cows under Heat Stress
    Zhu, W.
    Zhang, B. X.
    Yao, K. Y.
    Yoon, I.
    Chung, Y. H.
    Wang, J. K.
    Liu, J. X.
    ASIAN-AUSTRALASIAN JOURNAL OF ANIMAL SCIENCES, 2016, 29 (06): : 801 - 806
  • [29] THE EFFECTS OF AGE ON THE ERYTHROCYTE SODIUM AND POTASSIUM CONCENTRATIONS OF DAIRY-COWS DURING LATE PREGNANCY AND EARLY LACTATION
    MULEI, CM
    DANIEL, RCW
    VETERINARY RESEARCH COMMUNICATIONS, 1990, 14 (01) : 63 - 70
  • [30] Physiological and nutritional changes of dairy goats for maintaining milk yield during extreme heat stress conditions at late lactation.
    Hamzaoui, S.
    Salama, A. A. K.
    Caja, G.
    Albanell, E.
    Flores, C.
    Such, X.
    JOURNAL OF DAIRY SCIENCE, 2010, 93 : 570 - 570