Abstract

Little information is available concerning the effects of offering additional concentrates with total mixed ration (TMR) on milk production. The aim of the present study was to compare TMR representing simplified feeding (TMR1) with TMR combined with a decreasing amount of additional concentrate (TMR2C). Finnish Ayrshire cows (39) were housed in a loose housing barn. TMR1 consisted of a mixed ration of grass silage (0.49) and concentrates (0.51). In TMR2C, the same grass silage and concentrate were mixed in a ratio of 55:45. In TMR2C, cows were offered additional concentrates from automatic feeders differing in composition from the concentrate in TMR1 [6.5 kg d-1 (first 100 days, Phase 1), 3.0 kg d-1 (subsequent 50 days, Phase 2) and no concentrate thereafter (Phase 3)]. During the whole experiment (224 days), total consumption of concentrates per cow averaged 2426 kg dry matter (TMR1) and 2414 kg dry matter (TMR2C). There were no significant differences in mean total dry matter, metabolizable energy, crude protein or absorbed amino acid intakes. During Phase 2, total intake of all cows fed TMR2C was one kg lower (P = 0.10) than for cows fed TMR1. This was due to differences in total feed intake of multiparous cows. Average yields (kg d-1) of milk, energy corrected milk, protein, fat and lactose were not significantly different between diets. During Phase 2, primiparous cows tended to produce more energy corrected milk on TMR2C than on TMR1. The results showed that both TMR1 and TMR2C were equal feeding strategies for early lactating cows and cows did not benefit from greater concentrate consumption in early stage of lactation when total consumption of concentrates was similar.;

Highlights

  • Reported that feeding fixed or decreasing proportions of concentrates in the total mixed ration (TMR) to primiparous cows during lactation had no effect on milk production

  • The circumstances might be less optimal for multiparous cows concerning the use of only one TMR in feeding because those cows produce more milk in early lactation and they have a different lactation curve and energy partitioning compared to primiparous cows

  • The dietary proportion of concentrate consumed in the TMR2C diet was 0.57 during the first 100 days

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Summary

Introduction

During Phase 2, total intake of all cows fed TMR2C was one kg lower (P = 0.10) than for cows fed TMR1. This was due to differences in total feed intake of multiparous cows. During Phase 2, primiparous cows tended to produce more energy corrected milk on TMR2C than on TMR1. The circumstances might be less optimal for multiparous cows concerning the use of only one TMR in feeding because those cows produce more milk in early lactation and they have a different lactation curve (a clear peak) and energy partitioning compared to primiparous cows

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