Leiber, Florian; Holinger, Mirjam; Zehner, Nils; Zeller, Katharina; Probst, Johanna K.; Spengler Neff, Anet (2016). Intake Destination in dairy cows fed roughage-based diets: An approach based on chewing behaviour measurements Applied Animal Behaviour Science, 185, pp. 9-14. Elsevier 10.1016/j.applanim.2016.10.010
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Chewing behaviour of 23 lactating Swiss Fleckvieh cows was analysed in order to evaluate the predictive potential for quantitative dry matter intake in a roughage-based indoor cattle feeding system. Cows were fed total mixed rations (TMR) based on silages and hay with different concentrate supplements. They were kept in a tie stall enabling individual feed intake measurements. Two measurements were conducted within one month. Chewing behaviour was recorded with RumiWatch® sensor collars, based on pressure tubes in the collar’s noseband. Cows were equipped with collars for 96 h per measurement period. First 24 h were accounted as adaptation time; data of the subsequent 72 h were used for analysis. Data included ruminating, eating (min/day), rumination boli (n per day), chewing frequency and intensity during ruminating (chews/min and chews/bolus), and activity changes (switching between ruminating, eating and idle; n per h). The constancy of parameters within cows across measurement days was tested with linear regression models. A linear mixed-effects model was applied to estimate a regression on measured feed intake. Average feed intake per day across all measurements was 19.7 kg dry matter per cow, average eating time was 389 min/day and ruminating time was 551 min/day. For most of the chewing behaviour variables, factor ‘cow’ was significant, while ‘day’ was not, indicating a between-animals variance but good consistency of the data within animal. After a stepwise backward procedure in the mixed-effects model, the remaining significant variable was ‘chewing frequency’ (chews per minute during rumination). Inclusion of ‘animal’ as a random factor resulted in an equation with conditional R2 = 0.7. The model without random factor revealed a very low R2. In conclusion, the random factor model allowed estimation of individual changes in feed intake within animal but not across animals. Chewing behaviour measurements proved to have a potential for the detection of relative intake alterations with roughage-based TMR diets but data were not sufficient for quantitative estimations.
Item Type: |
Journal Article (Original Article) |
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Division/Institute: |
School of Agricultural, Forest and Food Sciences HAFL > Resource-efficient agricultural production systems School of Agricultural, Forest and Food Sciences HAFL > Agriculture |
Name: |
Leiber, Florian; Holinger, Mirjam; Zehner, Nils; Zeller, Katharina; Probst, Johanna K. and Spengler Neff, Anet |
Subjects: |
S Agriculture > SF Animal culture |
ISSN: |
01681591 |
Publisher: |
Elsevier |
Language: |
English |
Submitter: |
Michael Howald |
Date Deposited: |
03 Mar 2020 11:03 |
Last Modified: |
03 Mar 2020 11:03 |
Publisher DOI: |
10.1016/j.applanim.2016.10.010 |
Uncontrolled Keywords: |
Dry matter intake, Dairy cows, Chewing behaviour, Chewing sensors, RumiWatch |
ARBOR DOI: |
10.24451/arbor.10027 |
URI: |
https://arbor.bfh.ch/id/eprint/10027 |