Intake Regulation and Grazing Behavior of Dairy Cows Under Continuous Stocking

This experiment aimed at studying the behavioral strategies grazing dairy cows use to satisfy their nutritional needs as the day progresses and the possible role of rumen fill in controlling these behavioral strategies. The day was divided into 3 main periods (0600 to 1200 h, 1200 to 1800 h, and 1800 to 2400 h), where the 3 main grazing bouts (dawn, afternoon, and dusk) of dairy cows usually occur. Four late lactating rumen-cannulated dairy cows were used in a repeated measures design; grazing bout was the within-subjects factor. Cows had access to a 1-ha grass sward under a continuous stocking system. To estimate dry matter intake, bite rate, bite mass (BM), and intake rate at the 3 grazing bouts, cows were rumen-evacuated at 0600, 1200, 1800, and 2330 h, and the jaw recorders were fitted to the cows between these time points. Time spent eating by dairy cows at the dusk grazing bout was much longer than that at the other 2 grazing bouts and composed about 40% of the daily total eating time. Total grazing jaw movement (TGJM) rate was constant during the day at around 75/min. Bite rate, BM, and, hence, intake rate increased, but chewing rate decreased as the day progressed. The increase in BM was mainly due to the increase in dry matter content of the grass at dusk rather than increased bite dimensions. Therefore, it could be concluded that the main behavioral strategies dairy cows use to satisfy their nutritional needs under continuous stocking include manipulating their eating time, biting rate, and chewing rate, with little control over TGJM rate and BM. Dairy cows interrupted the first 2 grazing bouts (dawn and afternoon) long before reaching their maximal rumen capacity, indicating that rumen fill is less likely to play a significant role in signaling the termination of these 2 grazing bouts. However, rumen pool sizes were always maximal at the time when the dusk grazing bout ceased, indicating that rumen fill is more likely to play a major role in signaling the termination of the dusk grazing bout.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Taweel, H.Z., Tas, B.M., Dijkstra, J., Tamminga, S.
Format: Article/Letter to editor biblioteca
Language:English
Subjects:digestibility, dry, ingestive behavior, lactating cows, propionate, rumen, sheep, sward surface height, time, voluntary intake,
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/intake-regulation-and-grazing-behavior-of-dairy-cows-under-contin
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spelling dig-wur-nl-wurpubs-3370382024-12-04 Taweel, H.Z. Tas, B.M. Dijkstra, J. Tamminga, S. Article/Letter to editor Journal of Dairy Science 87 (2004) 10 ISSN: 0022-0302 Intake Regulation and Grazing Behavior of Dairy Cows Under Continuous Stocking 2004 This experiment aimed at studying the behavioral strategies grazing dairy cows use to satisfy their nutritional needs as the day progresses and the possible role of rumen fill in controlling these behavioral strategies. The day was divided into 3 main periods (0600 to 1200 h, 1200 to 1800 h, and 1800 to 2400 h), where the 3 main grazing bouts (dawn, afternoon, and dusk) of dairy cows usually occur. Four late lactating rumen-cannulated dairy cows were used in a repeated measures design; grazing bout was the within-subjects factor. Cows had access to a 1-ha grass sward under a continuous stocking system. To estimate dry matter intake, bite rate, bite mass (BM), and intake rate at the 3 grazing bouts, cows were rumen-evacuated at 0600, 1200, 1800, and 2330 h, and the jaw recorders were fitted to the cows between these time points. Time spent eating by dairy cows at the dusk grazing bout was much longer than that at the other 2 grazing bouts and composed about 40% of the daily total eating time. Total grazing jaw movement (TGJM) rate was constant during the day at around 75/min. Bite rate, BM, and, hence, intake rate increased, but chewing rate decreased as the day progressed. The increase in BM was mainly due to the increase in dry matter content of the grass at dusk rather than increased bite dimensions. Therefore, it could be concluded that the main behavioral strategies dairy cows use to satisfy their nutritional needs under continuous stocking include manipulating their eating time, biting rate, and chewing rate, with little control over TGJM rate and BM. Dairy cows interrupted the first 2 grazing bouts (dawn and afternoon) long before reaching their maximal rumen capacity, indicating that rumen fill is less likely to play a significant role in signaling the termination of these 2 grazing bouts. However, rumen pool sizes were always maximal at the time when the dusk grazing bout ceased, indicating that rumen fill is more likely to play a major role in signaling the termination of the dusk grazing bout. en application/pdf https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/intake-regulation-and-grazing-behavior-of-dairy-cows-under-contin 10.3168/jds.S0022-0302(04)73477-3 https://edepot.wur.nl/28570 digestibility dry ingestive behavior lactating cows propionate rumen sheep sward surface height time voluntary intake Wageningen University & Research
institution WUR NL
collection DSpace
country Países bajos
countrycode NL
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-wur-nl
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname WUR Library Netherlands
language English
topic digestibility
dry
ingestive behavior
lactating cows
propionate
rumen
sheep
sward surface height
time
voluntary intake
digestibility
dry
ingestive behavior
lactating cows
propionate
rumen
sheep
sward surface height
time
voluntary intake
spellingShingle digestibility
dry
ingestive behavior
lactating cows
propionate
rumen
sheep
sward surface height
time
voluntary intake
digestibility
dry
ingestive behavior
lactating cows
propionate
rumen
sheep
sward surface height
time
voluntary intake
Taweel, H.Z.
Tas, B.M.
Dijkstra, J.
Tamminga, S.
Intake Regulation and Grazing Behavior of Dairy Cows Under Continuous Stocking
description This experiment aimed at studying the behavioral strategies grazing dairy cows use to satisfy their nutritional needs as the day progresses and the possible role of rumen fill in controlling these behavioral strategies. The day was divided into 3 main periods (0600 to 1200 h, 1200 to 1800 h, and 1800 to 2400 h), where the 3 main grazing bouts (dawn, afternoon, and dusk) of dairy cows usually occur. Four late lactating rumen-cannulated dairy cows were used in a repeated measures design; grazing bout was the within-subjects factor. Cows had access to a 1-ha grass sward under a continuous stocking system. To estimate dry matter intake, bite rate, bite mass (BM), and intake rate at the 3 grazing bouts, cows were rumen-evacuated at 0600, 1200, 1800, and 2330 h, and the jaw recorders were fitted to the cows between these time points. Time spent eating by dairy cows at the dusk grazing bout was much longer than that at the other 2 grazing bouts and composed about 40% of the daily total eating time. Total grazing jaw movement (TGJM) rate was constant during the day at around 75/min. Bite rate, BM, and, hence, intake rate increased, but chewing rate decreased as the day progressed. The increase in BM was mainly due to the increase in dry matter content of the grass at dusk rather than increased bite dimensions. Therefore, it could be concluded that the main behavioral strategies dairy cows use to satisfy their nutritional needs under continuous stocking include manipulating their eating time, biting rate, and chewing rate, with little control over TGJM rate and BM. Dairy cows interrupted the first 2 grazing bouts (dawn and afternoon) long before reaching their maximal rumen capacity, indicating that rumen fill is less likely to play a significant role in signaling the termination of these 2 grazing bouts. However, rumen pool sizes were always maximal at the time when the dusk grazing bout ceased, indicating that rumen fill is more likely to play a major role in signaling the termination of the dusk grazing bout.
format Article/Letter to editor
topic_facet digestibility
dry
ingestive behavior
lactating cows
propionate
rumen
sheep
sward surface height
time
voluntary intake
author Taweel, H.Z.
Tas, B.M.
Dijkstra, J.
Tamminga, S.
author_facet Taweel, H.Z.
Tas, B.M.
Dijkstra, J.
Tamminga, S.
author_sort Taweel, H.Z.
title Intake Regulation and Grazing Behavior of Dairy Cows Under Continuous Stocking
title_short Intake Regulation and Grazing Behavior of Dairy Cows Under Continuous Stocking
title_full Intake Regulation and Grazing Behavior of Dairy Cows Under Continuous Stocking
title_fullStr Intake Regulation and Grazing Behavior of Dairy Cows Under Continuous Stocking
title_full_unstemmed Intake Regulation and Grazing Behavior of Dairy Cows Under Continuous Stocking
title_sort intake regulation and grazing behavior of dairy cows under continuous stocking
url https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/intake-regulation-and-grazing-behavior-of-dairy-cows-under-contin
work_keys_str_mv AT taweelhz intakeregulationandgrazingbehaviorofdairycowsundercontinuousstocking
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AT dijkstraj intakeregulationandgrazingbehaviorofdairycowsundercontinuousstocking
AT tammingas intakeregulationandgrazingbehaviorofdairycowsundercontinuousstocking
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