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724. Levels of feeding of concentrates for dairy heifers before and after calving
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 June 2009
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1. Two levels of steaming-up and two levels of concentrates feeding during the first 84 days of lactation have been compared in a 2 x 2 factorial experiment over three winter seasons, using fifty-two Shorthorn and thirty-six Friesian heifers. The levels of steaming up were 2 cwt. and ½ cwt. of concentrates fed over the last 21 and 14 days of pregnancy, respectively. The levels of concentrates during lactation were 5 and 3 lb. per 10 lb. milk per day. Roughages were fed for maintenance. After the 84th day of lactation all animals were given the same treatment for the remainder of the lactation. Milk yield, milk composition and live weight were measured throughout the lactation.
2. The treatments were annotated as HH, HL, LH and LL, the first letter indicating level of steaming-up and the second the level of concentrates feeding in the first 12 weeks of lactation.
3. Mean milk yields were as follows:
4. The LH treatment reqiuird 3 cwt. more concentrates than HL to produce the same amount of milk.
5. The response to additioal concentrates on the LH treatment after calving was l lb. additional milk per l lb. additional starch equivalent.
6. Butterfat percentages were higher (3·69%) in both groups on low-lactation feeding than in the two groups on high-lactation feeding (3·43%). The HL group (i.e. the group that received high steaming-up and low-lactation feeding) combined high milk yield with a higher butterfat percentage, and at current milk and feedingstuff prices and under the conditions of the trials, this group showed a greater cash return than the groups on the other three treatments.
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