Abstract

Thirty dairy cows, fed a control diet consisting of silage and concentrates, were given either 0, 1000, or 2000ppm of supplemental Zn (DM basis), from zinc sulfate monohydrate (ZnSO4·H2O) for most of a lactation. Feeding 2000ppm Zn decreased milk yield and feed intake after several weeks. Some cows were affected more severely than others. Generally, primiparous animals were more tolerant of the high Zn diet than multiparous cows. Milk Zn was materially higher for cows fed 1000ppm added Zn than controls. With 2000ppm Zn, milk Zn was elevated further but returned to control values when the high Zn diet was discontinued. Plasma Zn was higher in cows fed supplemental Zn with the increase from 1000 to 2000 greater than that for the first addition. Plasma Cu was lower in cows feed 2000ppm Zn but milk Cu was not reduced. Milk fat content was not affected, but protein and SNF were reduced by the 12th wk with the 2000ppm Zn diet. There was no apparent effect on long-term health or performance after the cows were removed from the 2000ppm Zn diet. Except for lower calf weights with 2000ppm Zn, reproductive performance was not measurably affected by the dietary treatments. The 1000ppm added Zn diet had no adverse effect on the cows in any parameter measured.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call