Artigo
Herbage selection, intake and digestibility in grazing beef cattle
Autor
Reis, S. F.
Huntington, G.
Hopkins, M.
Whisnant, S.
Paulino, P. V. R.
Institución
Resumen
The objectives of this study were to measure voluntary herbage intake in kg of dry matter (DM) per day and in proportions of plant species and components (leaf, stem, dead material) of nonlactating Angus cows under grazing conditions and compare DM herbage intakes to intakes of the same cows when they were nursing their calves. Twenty nonlactating Angus cows (50±12 mo of age, 525±55 kg weight) were selected from a larger herd to create 4 groups of 5 cows with average DM intakes that ranged from 11 to 15 kg/d during lactation. The cows were allocated for 28 d as a group on the pasture that contained 5540 kg DM/ha as tall fescue (Festuca arundinacea), bermudagrass (Cynodon dactylon var. Tifton-85), red clover (Trifolium pratense) and other plants. Pasture composition was measured by visual appraisal and manual separation of pasture clippings. Daily allocations provided approximately 2.5 kg DM/100 kg BW. Each cow was individually fed 0.82 kg supplement DM daily that contained 498 mg of the n-alkane dotriacontane (C32) and 448 mg hexatriacontane (C36) during the last 14 d. Fecal grab samples were collected from each cow during the last 5 d. Grazing intake (8.92±1.5 kg DM/d) was calculated for each cow from C32 intake and ratios of tritriacontane (C33):C32 in feces and did not differ (P=0.97) among cow groups. Individual cow intakes during lactation and after weaning, during grazing, were not correlated. Measured sward and calculated intake proportions of tall fescue (0.58 and 0.65), bermudagrass (0.38 and 0.33), and red clover (0.02 and 0.01) indicated cows selected slightly more tall fescue and less bermudagrass and red clover than was on offer. Manual separations of sward and calculated intake proportions of dead material and stem (0.89 and 0.95), green leaf (0.10 and 0.02) and other material (0.01 and 0.04) were similar. N-alkanes provided credible calculations of intake by grazing cows. Intakes of lactating cows did not predict their intake after weaning.