The effect of supplementary winter feeding on the total yield and lactation curves of cows in a herd of British Friesian cattle
- 1 August 1976
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in The Journal of Agricultural Science
- Vol. 87 (1), 101-104
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0021859600026630
Abstract
Summary: A tightly autumn-calving herd of British Friesian cattle, running throughout the year as a single group, received two different amounts of mineralized barley supplement per day during the winter of 1973/4. As they calved, alternate cows were allocated to one of two rates of supplementary feeding differing in the approximate ratio 2:3 which was applied according to the calendar and not specifically related to milk yield.Average herd size for the year was 140 cows; average milk sales were 4680 kg/cow at a total supplementary concentrate use of 650 kg/cow. All cows had free access to selffeed silage reinforced with brewers' grains. Cows which received 50% more supplement from 8 September to 31 January (an extra 235 kg/cow) showed an improvement in total lactation milk yield of 248 kg/cow. Standard lactation curves were used to demonstrate a significant interaction between quantity of concentrates fed and season of production and showed that most of the improvement took place during the winter period.This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- Experiments on the nutrition of the dairy heifer:IX. Food utilization in lactationThe Journal of Agricultural Science, 1975
- Factors affecting the shape of the lactation curve in cattleAnimal Science, 1969