Title: AVS466 Dairy Cattle Nutrition Introduction
1AVS466 - Dairy Cattle NutritionIntroduction
- David Marcinkowski
- Extension Dairy Specialist
2Class Website www.umaine.edu/animlvet/AVS466/ind
ex.htm
- It can also be reached from my staff page on the
AVS website
3(No Transcript)
4Nutrition Affects Everything
- Production
- Economics
- Health
- Reproduction
- Growth
- Labor
- Genetic Expression
- Agronomic Systems
- Impact on nutrient cycles
- NPK
5Farm Nutrient Cycle
6Nutrient Cycles
- More nutrients (N, P, K) enter the farm in the
form of feed than fertilizer - Can create build up that leads to problems
- Maine dairy producers buy a lot of grain off farm
- Nutrients tend to build up in the soil over time.
It takes 1 - 2.5 acres of land just to get rid of
the nutrients from one cow. - Pollution potential.
- N run off into water supplies, ammonia into the
air - P and K build up in soils
- P runs off with erosion - Eutrophication
- Much research interest in decreasing excretion of
these nutrients by gaining better digestion with
erosion
7Blame the Nutritionist!
- Nutrition is so important, blame everything on
nutrition. - Some problems on the farm are caused by
nutrition, but many more are caused by
management, reproduction, genetics, etc.
8Feeding is Costly
- Feed represents
- 40-60 of the total operating costs on dairy
farms. - 70-80 of the cost of raising heifers.
- Costs include feed that is purchased from other
sources., but also seed, fertilizer, lime,
fencing, gas, oil, equipment, repairs, chemicals,
labor and building (silos etc.) - Witter Center feed costs
- 5.61 per lactating cow per day
- 1683 per cow per year
- 7.48 per cwt of milk produced
- about 67,000 per year for the milking herd
9High Milk Production With Low Feed Costs
- Dairy producers always striving for more
production with less costs - Shouldnt they be striving for greater profit?
10High Production Benefits
- More milk means more income
- More milk means more costs
- More milk means more profit
- Spreading out maintenance costs over more lbs of
milk - Spreading out fixed/overhead costs over more lbs.
of milk. - Marginal costs go down
- High production doesnt cause stress
11(No Transcript)
12Marginal Costs
- Marginal cost to produce and additional lb of
milk - More production means dilution of the maintenance
requirement so marginal cost goes down - Maintenance costs 1/day
- Milk production variable costs 10 cents/lb
- Marginal cost goes down
- 1 lb/day - 1 1(0.10) 1.10
- 2 lb/day - 1 2(0.10) 1.20 (0.60)
- 10 lb/day - 1 10(0.10) 2.00 (0.20)
- 11 lb/day - 1 11(0.10) 2.10 (0.191)
- 100 lb/day - 1 100(0.10) 11.00 (0.11)
- 101 lb/day - 1 101(0.10) 11.10 (0.1099)
- Milk sells for 15 cents / lb
- Never want to do anything that reduces milk
production!
13High Production Problems
- Generally increased production is the animals
response to a reduction in stress - Better housing More milk
- Production increases the risk of problems
- As production goes up the tightrope gets narrower
- But if management is there we dont have to see
more problems - Greater chance of metabolic problems such as
acidosis, ketosis, milk fever, laminitis etc. - Greater chance of other health problems-
mastitis, reproduction, culling etc. - When put on a per unit of milk basis the
incidence of many of these health problems is
actually less
14Law of Diminishing Returns
- As production increases
- Ration becomes more sophisticated and expensive
- More difficult to squeeze all nutrients into a
volume the cow can consume - At some point the law of diminishing returns
kicks in - Point exists when an increase in feed cost for an
additional pound of milk is greater than the
return form the pond of milk
15Nutrient
- Definition
- A dietary essential for one or more species of
animal - All animals do not require the same nutrients
- Laboratory analyses determines the nutrients we
feed - Fiber vs ADF
- Ruminants have simpler dietary nutrient
requirements because many are supplied by the
rumen bugs
16Nutrient Categories
- Protein
- Carbohydrates
- Lipids/Fats
- Minerals
- Vitamins
- Water
17Chemical Analysis Scheme
18Protein is Required to
- Principle component of body tissues
- Enhance feed intake and energy use
- Enzymes
- Supply N to the rumen microbes
- Ammonia, Amino acids, Peptides
- Supply amino acids for synthesis of
- Milk protein
- Tissue protein
- Enzymes, hormones etc.
- What are proteins and amino acids?
19Chemical Structure of Amino Acid
20Protein
21Amino Acids
- Essential and Nonessential
- Nonessential - synthesized by body
- Essential - 10 Essential AAs
- Necessary for the animal
- Must come from diet
- Not a concern in most ruminant diets because
essential AAs are synthesized by rumen bugs - However in higher producing animals we see a
response to adding certain AAs
22Protein Terminology
- Intake protein IP - What the cow eats
- Crude Protein Calculated from Nitrogen content
of feed - Proteins are 16 N
- Multiply N content of feed by 6.25 (100/16)
- Soluble and Insoluble - refer to breakdown in
water or rumen fluid - SIP Quickly available to rumen bugs
23Protein Terminology
- Degradable and Undegradable - refers to whether
it breaks down in the rumen or not - Degradable - Broken down in rumen and used by the
rumen bugs - DIP or RDP
- Undegradable protein is also referred to as
bypass protein - UIP or RUP
24Protein Terminology
- Microbial protein - refers to protein produced by
the bugs in the rumen - Calculated from the ration NSC and degradable
protein available to the bugs - If you have a balance of these two you maximize
rumen microbial activity
25Two Proteins Available to Cattle
- True protein - AAs
- Non-protein nitrogen NPN
- Any form of available nitrogen
- Rumen microbes use both sources for the
production of microbial protein - Microbial protein supplies 50 of cows protein
requirement - Microbial protein is much higher quality protein
than the feed components from which it was
produced - As a result you don't have to worry too much
about the amino acid (AA) content of the diet or
providing the essential AA in diet.
26Essential AA Profiles
27Proteins in Rumen
- Proteins hydrolyzed to AAs and peptides
- Protein degradability
- Not all bypass protein is equal
- of dietary protein that is broken down
- Amino acids have one of two fates
- Incorporation into microbial protein
- Deamination to ammonia and VFA
- Important because some microbes need ammonia
- Ammonia is used to make other AAs
- But this process wastes energy because VFA used
for energy
28NPN Non Protein Nitrogen
- Utilized by rumen microbes to make AAs
- Produces ammonia in the ruminant
- Several forms
- Ammonia
- Urea Most common
- Rumen has high urease activity Broken down
Quickly - 45 Nitrogen
- 281 protein
- Other nitrogenous compounds - Nitrates etc.
- Use questionable in high producing cows
29Rumen Ammonia
- Two Fates
- Used to form AAs and proteins
- Process needs carbon skeleton to form AA
- Carbon comes from sugar or VFA
- Energy needed
- Balance of P and CHO important
- Imbalance causes more ammonia to be absorbed
- Absorbed by rumen into blood
- Liver converts to urea
- Recycled or excreted in urine
- Conversion requires energy
30(No Transcript)
31Limitations of Microbial Protein Synthesis
- Two most likely limitations
- Energy available
- NH3 available
- These need to be synchronized
- For diets containing urea, may also need
- Sulfur (for S-containing AA)
- Branched-chain C-skeletons
- MO cannot make branched-chain C-chains
- These normally not a problem
32Matching Protein and Energy Sources
33Energy
- Not a nutrient
- Obtained from several sources
- Carbohydrates - CHO
- Fats - 2.25 times the energy
- Proteins Via deamination
34Carbohydrates
- Major source of energy for cattle
- Makes up more than 65 of DM in feeds
- Broken down in rumen to VFAs, methane, carbon
dioxide and water - Two types
- Structural and Nonstructural
- Tremendous differences in the speed with which
structural and nonstructural breakdown in the
rumen. - Structural Slow Nonstructural - Rapid
- Compatible combination important for good rumen
digestion
35Volatile Fatty Acids VFAs
- Acetic acid 2 Carbons
- Absorbed by the rumen wall
- Oxidized throughout the body to generate ATP.
- Proprionic acid 3 Carbons
- Removed from portal blood by the liver.
- In the liver, proprionate used for
gluconeogenesis - Butyric acid 4 Carbons
- Rumen as ketone beta-hydroxybutyric acid
- Most used by the rumen wall
36(No Transcript)
37Carbohydrate Forms
- Sugars
- Starches
- Pectins
- Hemicellulose
- Cellulose
- Lignin
- 1-3 Nonstructural
- 4-6 Structural
38Sugars
- Glucose, Fructose, Sucrose, Galactose etc.
- Most easy form to digest
- Quickly utilized by rumen bacteria within minutes
- Little to none bypasses the rumen
- Water soluble
- Located mainly in the plant cell cytoplasm
- Present in whole grains and forages
39Sugars
- Many byproducts are low in sugars and starches
because these are removed in the processing of
flour, alcohol and sweeteners. - Beet Pulp
- Corn Gluten Feed
- Brewers grain
- Distillers Grains
- Sugars are higher in forages and whole grains
- Molasses is a good feed to increase sugar content
of ration
40Chemical Structure of Glucose
41Starches
- Sugar polymers
- alpha bonds
- Readily digested in the rumen
- Breakdown less efficient than SI - Methane
- Second best energy source for most rumen bugs
- Hydrolysis to sugars by amylolytic bacteria
- 50 may bypass rumen Rate of passage
- Sugars and starches make up NSC
- Feeds
- Whole grains highest
- Forages next
- Most byproducts are low
42Chemical Structure of Starch
43Sugar and Starch Measures
- Non-structural Carbohydrate
- Determined Enzymatically with amylase
- Non Fiberous Carbohydrate
- Determined by subtraction
- NFC DM-NDF-CP-Fat-Ash
- Includes pectins
- Expressed as percent of DM
- NSC and NFC often used interchangeably but they
are different, because of pectin level. - These values will be similar in feeds that have
little pectin. - way off on feeds like beet pulp that have a lot
of pectin.
44Pectins
- Structural carbohydrate?
- Intercellular glue
- Linear and branched chains galacturonic acid
molecules - High digestibility in rumen
- Present in forages and some by products
- Beet pulp, Citrus Pulp and Soy Hulls
45Structure of Pectins
Linear and branched chains galacturonic acid
molecules
46Cellulose and Hemicellulose
- Cell wall components
- Structural CHOs
- Long branched chain polysaccharides
- Hemicellulose contains pentose sugars (mainly
xylan) and other compounds - Insoluble in water
- Digestion requires cellulolytic bacteria
- Slowly digested
- Digestibility affected by lignin
- NDF - both
- ADF - just cellulose
47Structure of Cellulose
Beta bonding
48Plant cell wall
49Lignin
- Structural carbohydrate - Wood
- Cell wall component
- Indigestible by ruminants
- Fungi
- Slows digestibility of all other components
- Present in ADF and NDF
- Polymer of aromatic alcohols
- Heavily crosslinked polymer of aromatic/phenolic
alcohols - Forms a net like structure around other cell wall
components
50Structure of Lignin
51Fiber Measures
- Acid Detergent Fiber
- Lignin and Cellulose
- Cell wall of the plant
- Digestibility is lower
- Increases as the plant matures
- Predicts energy level
- Neutral Detergent Fiber
- Total cell wall
- ADF hemicellulose
- Moderate digestibility
- Dry matter intake control
- Increases as plant matures
- Both expressed as percent of the DM
52Net Energy Measures
- Energy level in a feed or ration can be expressed
in a variety of ways. - TDN Total digestible nutrients
- NFE Nitrogen free extract
- Net Energy Basis
- NEM
- NEL
- NEG
- Expressed as Megacalories of Energy - Mcals
53(No Transcript)
54Net Energy
- Different types of livestock get different
amounts of energy from a feed. Depending on
whether the energy is used for - Maintenance
- Production
- Growth
55How are they calculated?
- The NEM is calculated by determining the amount
of the feed required to keep an animal at a
constant weight. - The NEG value of a feed is calculated by
determining the energy deposited as fat and
protein in body tissue from feed consumed above
that needed for maintenance. - The NEL value of a feed is calculated by
determining the energy utilized to produce milk
from feed consumed above that needed for
maintenance.
56Net Energy Regressions
- The NEL content of a feed is difficult to
determine experimentally, so NEL is not measured,
but calculated. Usually as a function of
something that can be measured such as TDN or
ADF. - NEL of Grass 1.085-(0.0150 X ADF)
- In this case NEL is a function of ADF!
57Source of Energy is Important
- Ground Corn vs Corn Gluten Feed
- Both have NEL of .89 Mcals/lb
- GC 9 NDF CGF 45 NDF
- Which is best?
58Source of Energy is Important
Which is better?
59Lipids
60Fats
- Also known as Ether Extract
- Highest energy per lb
- Chemical structure
- Fatty acids - Hydrocarbon chains
- Glycerol
- Majority absorbed in small intestines
- Few converted to VFAs
- Too much fat in the diet inhibits rumen digestion
of cellulose - Fatty Acids inhibit bacteria
- Coats fiber to prevent breakdown
61Chemical Structures of Fats
Fatty Acid
Triglyceride
Palmitic Acid 16 Carbons Stearic Acid 18
Carbons Oleic Acid 181 Linoleic Acid 182