Effects of season of growth and digestibility of herbage on intake by grazing dairy cows
- 1 June 1963
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Animal Science
- Vol. 5 (2), 119-129
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0003356100021619
Abstract
SUMMARY: 1. The intakes of herbage organic matter (OM) and digestible organic matter (DOM) by twenty dairy cows were measured during two periods of strip grazing on one pasture, in spring and late summer of the same year.2. Results from the first 5-day measurement period in the spring suggested that intakes at this time were restricted primarily because the cows had difficulty in gathering the short herbage. Measurements on ten of the cows continued during a further 5 weeks while the digestibility of the OM of grazed herbage declined from about 80 to 68%. There was a fall of about 20% in DOM intake by the cows during this period; one-quarter of the fall could be ascribed to a reduction in OM intake and the remainder to the decline in digestibility as such.3. Intakes were measured during two weeks in late summer and were compared with those measured during two weeks in the spring when the digestibility of the grazed herbage was similar. Intakes of DOM expressed as lb./lb. live-weight0·73 were the lower by about 10% in the late summer, or by from 10 to 20% in terms of DOM available for production when allowance had been made for maintenance requirements. This finding is discussed in relation to practical experience of the feeding value of autumn grass.Keywords
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- Estimation of the faeces output of ǵrazing animals from the concentration of chromium sesquioxide in a sample of faecesBritish Journal of Nutrition, 1963
- The voluntary intake of roughages by steersAnimal Science, 1962
- The herbage intake and milk production of strip- and zero-grazed dairy cowsThe Journal of Agricultural Science, 1962
- The regulation of food intake by sheepAnimal Science, 1961
- The indirect estimation of the digestibility of pasture herbage II. Regressions of digestibility on faecal nitrogen concentration; their determination in continuous digestibility trials and the effect of various factors on their accuracyThe Journal of Agricultural Science, 1960
- Excretion of chromium sesquioxide administered as a component of paper to sheepBritish Journal of Nutrition, 1960
- A METHOD FOR IDENTIFYING THE FAECES PRODUCED BY INDIVIDUAL CATTLE OR GROUPS OF CATTLE GRAZING TOGETHERGrass and Forage Science, 1960
- 702. Winter feeding of dairy cows: V. A comparison of the relative value for milk production of artificially dried cocksfoot and a timothy/meadow-fescue mixture grown both in spring and in autumnJournal of Dairy Research, 1958
- 608. Winter feeding of dairy cows: II. Dried grass produced in spring and in autumn compared with other concentrates and with spring grazingJournal of Dairy Research, 1956
- Grazing management practices and their relationship to the behaviour and grazing habits of cattleThe Journal of Agricultural Science, 1944