William H. Miner Agricultural Research Institute, Chazy, NY 12921.
Department of Animal Sciences, University of Florida, Gainesville 32611.
J Dairy Sci. 2018 May;101(5):4111-4121. doi: 10.3168/jds.2017-13729.
Feeding environment and feed accessibility influence the dairy cow's response to the ration and forage composition. Fiber content, physical form, and fermentability influence feeding behavior, feed intake, and overall cow metabolic and lactational responses to forage. It is possible to vary eating time of lactating dairy cattle by over 1 h/d by changing dietary silage fiber content, digestibility, and particle size. Optimizing silage particle size is important because excessively long particles increase the necessary chewing to swallow a bolus of feed, thereby increasing eating time. Under competitive feeding situations, excessively coarse or lower fiber digestibility silages may limit DMI of lactating dairy cows due to eating time requirements that exceed available time at the feed bunk. Additionally, greater silage particle size, especially the particles retained on the 19-mm sieve using the Penn State Particle Separator, are most likely to be sorted. Silage starch content and fermentability may influence ruminal propionate production and thereby exert substantial control over meal patterns and feed consumption. Compared with silage fiber characteristics, relatively little research has assessed how silage starch content and fermentability interact with the feeding environment to influence dairy cow feeding behavior. Finally, voluminous literature exists on the potential effects that silage fermentation end products have on feeding behavior and feed intake. However, the specific mechanisms of how these end products influence behavior and intake are poorly understood in some cases. The compounds shown to have the greatest effect on feeding behavior are lactate, acetate, propionate, butyrate, ammonia-N, and amines. Any limitation in the feeding environment will likely accentuate the negative response to poor silage fermentation. In the future, to optimize feeding behavior and dry matter intake of silage-based diets fed to dairy cattle, we will need to consider the chemical and physical properties of silage, end products of silage fermentation, and the social and physical components of the feeding environment.
饲养环境和饲料可获得性会影响奶牛对日粮和饲草组成的反应。纤维含量、物理形态和发酵性会影响采食行为、采食量以及奶牛对饲草的整体代谢和泌乳反应。通过改变日粮青贮纤维含量、消化率和颗粒大小,可以使泌乳奶牛的采食时间每天变化超过 1 小时。优化青贮颗粒大小很重要,因为过长的颗粒会增加吞咽饲料所需的咀嚼次数,从而延长采食时间。在竞争采食的情况下,由于采食时间要求超过饲槽可用时间,过于粗糙或纤维消化率较低的青贮可能会限制泌乳奶牛的干物质采食量。此外,较大的青贮颗粒大小,尤其是使用宾夕法尼亚州立颗粒分离器保留在 19 毫米筛上的颗粒,最有可能被分拣。青贮淀粉含量和发酵性可能会影响瘤胃丙酸的产生,从而对采食模式和饲料消耗产生实质性的控制。与青贮纤维特性相比,评估青贮淀粉含量和发酵性如何与饲养环境相互作用影响奶牛采食行为的研究相对较少。最后,大量文献存在于青贮发酵产物对采食行为和采食量的潜在影响。然而,在某些情况下,这些终产物如何影响行为和采食量的具体机制尚不清楚。对采食行为影响最大的化合物是乳酸、乙酸、丙酸、丁酸、氨态氮和胺。饲养环境的任何限制都可能加剧对青贮发酵不良的负面反应。在未来,为了优化基于青贮的日粮对奶牛的采食行为和干物质采食量,我们需要考虑青贮的化学和物理特性、青贮发酵的终产物以及饲养环境的社会和物理组成部分。