Productive and Economic Responses in Grazing Dairy Cows to Grain Supplementation on Family Farms in the South of Brazil

Pasture-based dairy production has been a major source of income for most family farms in the south of Brazil. Increasing milk prices have spurred an increase in grain supplementation, which has been poorly implemented, resulting in low levels of efficiency. To evaluate the consequences of supplemen...

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Main Authors: Luiz Carlos Pinheiro Machado Filho, Leandro Martins Dvila, Daniele Cristina da Silva Kazama, Lauana Luiza Bento, Shirley Kuhnen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2014-07-01
Series:Animals
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2076-2615/4/3/463
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author Luiz Carlos Pinheiro Machado Filho
Leandro Martins Dvila
Daniele Cristina da Silva Kazama
Lauana Luiza Bento
Shirley Kuhnen
author_facet Luiz Carlos Pinheiro Machado Filho
Leandro Martins Dvila
Daniele Cristina da Silva Kazama
Lauana Luiza Bento
Shirley Kuhnen
author_sort Luiz Carlos Pinheiro Machado Filho
collection DOAJ
description Pasture-based dairy production has been a major source of income for most family farms in the south of Brazil. Increasing milk prices have spurred an increase in grain supplementation, which has been poorly implemented, resulting in low levels of efficiency. To evaluate the consequences of supplementation on milk production and composition, grazing behavior and economic return, the widely used grain management system (CC-commercial concentrate, containing 21% CP, offered at 1 kg per 3.7 L of milk) was compared with an energy supplement (GC-ground corn, with 9.5% CP, offered at 0.4% of live weight). Ten Holstein cows were paired into two groups, and subjected to the two treatments in a crossover design. The cows remained in the same grazing group, and the grain supplement was offered individually at milking time and consumed completely. Each experimental period lasted 14 days, with 10 days for diet adaptation and four days for data collection; individual milk production and samples were collected to determine levels of fat, protein, lactose, carotenoids, vitamin A and N-urea. Grazing behavior was observed (scans every 5 min) in the first 4 h after the morning milking, and chemical composition of hand plucked samples of forage were measured. The cost of the supplement and profitability per treatment were calculated. Cows supplemented with GC consumed herbage with higher crude protein (CP: 16.23 vs. 14.62%; p < 0.05), had higher biting rate (44.21 vs. 39.54 bites/min; p < 0.03) and grazing time (22.20 vs. 20.55 scans; p < 0.05) than when receiving CC. There were no differences in milk composition between treatments (p > 0.05). However, higher concentrations of β-carotene and total carotenoids were detected in the milk of cows at 70–164 days of lactation, compared to <70 days of lactation (p < 0.05). Milk production was higher (13.19 vs. 11.59 kg/day; p < 0.05) when cows consumed CC, but resulted in lower profitability compared to GC (US$ 4.39 vs. US$ 4.83/cow per day). Our results show that higher productivity does not necessarily improve profitability. Cows receiving supplement with lower levels of protein were able to adjust their grazing behavior to meet their protein needs and this level of diet modification did not alter milk composition.
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spelling doaj.art-385d390492d14cc8b3c67077e8da01382022-12-22T03:36:53ZengMDPI AGAnimals2076-26152014-07-014346347510.3390/ani4030463ani4030463Productive and Economic Responses in Grazing Dairy Cows to Grain Supplementation on Family Farms in the South of BrazilLuiz Carlos Pinheiro Machado Filho0Leandro Martins Dvila1Daniele Cristina da Silva Kazama2Lauana Luiza Bento3Shirley Kuhnen4Lab of Applied Ethology and Animal Welfare (LETA), Departament of Zootechny and Rural Development, Federal University of Santa Catarina, Rod. Admar Gonzaga, 1346, Florianopolis, SC 88034-000, BrazilLab of Applied Ethology and Animal Welfare (LETA), Departament of Zootechny and Rural Development, Federal University of Santa Catarina, Rod. Admar Gonzaga, 1346, Florianopolis, SC 88034-000, BrazilLab of Applied Ethology and Animal Welfare (LETA), Departament of Zootechny and Rural Development, Federal University of Santa Catarina, Rod. Admar Gonzaga, 1346, Florianopolis, SC 88034-000, BrazilLab of Animal Biochemistry, Department of Zootechny and Rural Development, Federal University of Santa Catarina, Rod. Admar Gonzaga, 1346, Florianópolis, SC 88034-000, BrazilLab of Animal Biochemistry, Department of Zootechny and Rural Development, Federal University of Santa Catarina, Rod. Admar Gonzaga, 1346, Florianópolis, SC 88034-000, BrazilPasture-based dairy production has been a major source of income for most family farms in the south of Brazil. Increasing milk prices have spurred an increase in grain supplementation, which has been poorly implemented, resulting in low levels of efficiency. To evaluate the consequences of supplementation on milk production and composition, grazing behavior and economic return, the widely used grain management system (CC-commercial concentrate, containing 21% CP, offered at 1 kg per 3.7 L of milk) was compared with an energy supplement (GC-ground corn, with 9.5% CP, offered at 0.4% of live weight). Ten Holstein cows were paired into two groups, and subjected to the two treatments in a crossover design. The cows remained in the same grazing group, and the grain supplement was offered individually at milking time and consumed completely. Each experimental period lasted 14 days, with 10 days for diet adaptation and four days for data collection; individual milk production and samples were collected to determine levels of fat, protein, lactose, carotenoids, vitamin A and N-urea. Grazing behavior was observed (scans every 5 min) in the first 4 h after the morning milking, and chemical composition of hand plucked samples of forage were measured. The cost of the supplement and profitability per treatment were calculated. Cows supplemented with GC consumed herbage with higher crude protein (CP: 16.23 vs. 14.62%; p < 0.05), had higher biting rate (44.21 vs. 39.54 bites/min; p < 0.03) and grazing time (22.20 vs. 20.55 scans; p < 0.05) than when receiving CC. There were no differences in milk composition between treatments (p > 0.05). However, higher concentrations of β-carotene and total carotenoids were detected in the milk of cows at 70–164 days of lactation, compared to <70 days of lactation (p < 0.05). Milk production was higher (13.19 vs. 11.59 kg/day; p < 0.05) when cows consumed CC, but resulted in lower profitability compared to GC (US$ 4.39 vs. US$ 4.83/cow per day). Our results show that higher productivity does not necessarily improve profitability. Cows receiving supplement with lower levels of protein were able to adjust their grazing behavior to meet their protein needs and this level of diet modification did not alter milk composition.http://www.mdpi.com/2076-2615/4/3/463livestock sustainabilitygrazing behaviormilk compositionVoisin’s Rational Grazing
spellingShingle Luiz Carlos Pinheiro Machado Filho
Leandro Martins Dvila
Daniele Cristina da Silva Kazama
Lauana Luiza Bento
Shirley Kuhnen
Productive and Economic Responses in Grazing Dairy Cows to Grain Supplementation on Family Farms in the South of Brazil
Animals
livestock sustainability
grazing behavior
milk composition
Voisin’s Rational Grazing
title Productive and Economic Responses in Grazing Dairy Cows to Grain Supplementation on Family Farms in the South of Brazil
title_full Productive and Economic Responses in Grazing Dairy Cows to Grain Supplementation on Family Farms in the South of Brazil
title_fullStr Productive and Economic Responses in Grazing Dairy Cows to Grain Supplementation on Family Farms in the South of Brazil
title_full_unstemmed Productive and Economic Responses in Grazing Dairy Cows to Grain Supplementation on Family Farms in the South of Brazil
title_short Productive and Economic Responses in Grazing Dairy Cows to Grain Supplementation on Family Farms in the South of Brazil
title_sort productive and economic responses in grazing dairy cows to grain supplementation on family farms in the south of brazil
topic livestock sustainability
grazing behavior
milk composition
Voisin’s Rational Grazing
url http://www.mdpi.com/2076-2615/4/3/463
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