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  4. Intake Destination in dairy cows fed roughage-based diets: An approach based on chewing behaviour measurements
 

Intake Destination in dairy cows fed roughage-based diets: An approach based on chewing behaviour measurements

URI
https://arbor.bfh.ch/handle/arbor/37940
Version
Published
Date Issued
2016-12
Author(s)
Leiber, Florian
Holinger, Mirjam
Zehner, Nils
Zeller, Katharina  
Probst, Johanna K.
Spengler Neff, Anet
Type
Article
Language
English
Subjects

Dry matter intake

Dairy cows

Chewing behaviour

Chewing sensors

RumiWatch

Abstract
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.
Subjects
SF Animal culture
DOI
10.24451/arbor.10027
https://doi.org/10.24451/arbor.10027
Publisher DOI
10.1016/j.applanim.2016.10.010
Journal
Applied Animal Behaviour Science
ISSN
01681591
Publisher URL
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0168159116302908?via%3Dihub
Organization
Ressourceneffiziente landwirtschaftliche Produktionssysteme  
Agronomie  
Volume
185
Publisher
Elsevier
Submitter
HowaldM
Citation apa
Leiber, F., Holinger, M., Zehner, N., Zeller, K., Probst, J. K., & Spengler Neff, A. (2016). Intake Destination in dairy cows fed roughage-based diets: An approach based on chewing behaviour measurements. In Applied Animal Behaviour Science (Vol. 185). Elsevier. https://doi.org/10.24451/arbor.10027
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