4.7 Article

Replacing human-edible feed ingredients with by-products increases net food production efficiency in dairy cows

期刊

JOURNAL OF DAIRY SCIENCE
卷 101, 期 8, 页码 7146-7155

出版社

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.3168/jds.2017-14209

关键词

forage; distillers grain; rapeseed meal; sugar beet pulp

资金

  1. research program AquaAgri - Formas (Stockholm, Sweden)
  2. research program AquaAgri - Mistra (Stockholm, Sweden)
  3. research program AquaAgri - Lantmannen (Stockholm, Sweden)

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Global demand for food is increasing, and use of large amounts of potentially human-edible feedstuffs for dairy cows is an important concern. The present study examined whether feeding a by-product-based concentrate combined with high-quality grass silage to high-producing dairy cows affected feed intake and milk production compared with a conventional diet, as well as the effect on efficiency of human food production. In a changeover experiment with four 21-d periods, 24 dairy cows in mid-lactation were offered 9.6 kg of dry matter per day with 1 of 4 concentrates and highquality grass silage ad libitum. The control concentrate was based on cereal grain (wheat, oat, and barley) and soybean meal, whereas the 3 by-product-based concentrates contained sugar beet pulp in combination with mainly heat-treated rapeseed meal, distillers grain, or a mixture of both. All diets were formulated to be isoenergetic and isonitrogenous. The cows had 10-fold higher starch intake when fed the control diet than when fed the by-product-based concentrates. Silage intake (13 kg of dry matter/d) and milk production (33 kg of energy-corrected milk/d) were not affected by the change in diet. Therefore, replacing cereals and soybean meal with human-inedible by-products in a high-quality forage diet to dairy cows increased net food protein production substantially without lowering milk production.

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