4.4 Article

Fatty acid composition, fat-soluble vitamin concentrations and oxidative stability in bovine milk produced on two pastures with different botanical composition

Journal

LIVESTOCK SCIENCE
Volume 154, Issue 1-3, Pages 93-102

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.livsci.2013.03.013

Keywords

Grazing Botanical composition; Milk composition; Fatty acid; Fat-soluble vitamin; Oxidative stability

Funding

  1. Coordination of European Transnational Research in Organic Food and Farming (CORE)
  2. Organic Funding Body Network, Tjele, Denmark
  3. Swedish Research Council Formas, Stockholm, the Research Council of Norway, Oslo
  4. Danish Council for Independent Research, Copenhagen

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Previous research has shown that grazing pastures compared to feeding preserved forages has large impact on milk fatty acid (FA) composition, but differences between grazing red clover (Trifolium pratense L) or white clover (Trifolium repens L) are small, whereas the herbage proportions of dicotyledon botanical families is positively correlated with the milk-fat proportions of total polyunsaturated FA when grazing pastures in the Alps. The objective of the present study was to investigate the influence of botanically different pastures on bovine milk composition and milk susceptibility to oxidation. Two groups of 8 multiparous Norwegian Red dairy cows [mean (standard deviation); 599 (45.1) kg body weight, 73 (15.0) d in milk, 29.9 (2.90) kg milk/d at experiment start] grazed either a short-term pasture (SP) or a long-term pasture (LP). Both pastures were organically managed, meaning that no artificial fertilizers or herbicides were applied. The SP was representative for pastures, which are frequently, i.e. at least every third year, renewed by soil tillage and seeding, whereas LP was representative for pastures, which are less frequently renewed. The SP contained mainly meadow fescue (Festuca pratensis Huds.), timothy (Phleum pratense L.) and red clover and LP contained smooth meadow grass (Poa pratensis L), white clover and a variety of unsown species. Sixteen cows were blocked according to milk yield, days in milk and sire, and randomly within block allocated to the 2 dietary treatments with a daily pasture allowance of 15-20 kg dry matter per cow, supplemented with 3.0 kg barley (Hordeum vulgare L) concentrate. Milk was sampled during the last week of 3 experimental periods and analysed for FA composition by gas chromatography, concentrations of fat-soluble vitamins by high performance liquid chromatography, and oxidative stability in a light-exposure experiment by measuring the formation of hydroperoxides and by front-face fluorescence spectroscopy. Pasture type had no effect on milk yield, milk gross composition, and only minor effects on milk FA composition. Milk from SP had higher concentration of a-tocopherol than LP. The formation of hydroperoxides in milk was lower for SP than LP after 24 h light

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