Abstract
Lactating dairy cows consuming a diet of grass silage and a cereal-based supplement containing feather meal were given intravenous infusions of amino acids to determine the first-limiting amino acid for milk production, methionine having been shown to be not-limiting in a previous experiment. The three infusion treatments were a mixture of methionine, lysine, histidine and tryptophan (4AA); the mixture without lysine (-Lys); and the mixture without histidine (-His). The 4AA treatment markedly increased the yield of milk protein by about 18% and this response was not diminished by omission of lysine. However, exclusion of histidine produced no response over basal, confirming histidine as the first-limiting amino acid. In a second experiment, lactating cows receiving a similar basal diet were used to examine the effects on milk production of progressively substituting avian blood meal (rich in histidine and poor in methionine) for part of the feather meal. Blood meal was substituted for 0, 0.10, 0.20 and 0.40 of the feather meal in the supplement. The yield of milk protein was increased by about 15% by the first level of inclusion of blood meal, but there was no further response beyond the first level of inclusion. The results of the feeding trial confirm that dietary addition of protein rich in histidine and of low ruminal degradability substantially increased milk production with this basal diet, although it should be noted that the calculated supply of all the essential amino acids were also increased, by varying degrees, by substitution of blood meal. The results of the two experiments are discussed in relation to the likely importance of histidine as a limiting amino acid in dairy cows consuming diets typical of those used in practice. © 1999 Society of Chemical Industry
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