1403/01/10
عثمان عزیزی

عثمان عزیزی

مرتبه علمی: دانشیار
ارکید:
تحصیلات: دکترای تخصصی
اسکاپوس: 16400976500
دانشکده: دانشکده کشاورزی
نشانی:
تلفن:

مشخصات پژوهش

عنوان
Variations in feeding behaviour of high-yielding dairy cows in relation to parity during early to peak lactation
نوع پژوهش
JournalPaper
کلیدواژه‌ها
feeding behaviour, feed intake, parity, dairy cow
سال
2009
مجله LIVESTOCK SCIENCE
شناسه DOI
پژوهشگران osman Azizi ، LUTZ Hasselmann ، Otto Kaufmann

چکیده

The objective of this study was to compare the feeding behaviour of high-yielding dairy cows in relation to parity during early to peak lactation and to determine whether or not there was any relationship between variables describing their feeding behaviour and total feed intake. Information concerning feed intake of each individual dairy cow is especially valuable for the herd management, particularly in early lactation. However, technical requirements for implementation are rarely given. Therefore, relationships between feed intake and time-related feeding behaviour parameters are of special interest. Time-related parameters could be recorded on farm conditions adapted sensor technology. Seventy high-yielding lactating dairy cows in different parities (23 in the 1st lactation, 17 in the 2nd lactation, and 30 in the 3rd-and-more-lactation) with an average of 11 000 kg milk yield per year were fed using automatic feeders from the 2nd to the 15th week of lactation. 222 231 recorded visits were analysed in three equal periods (period 1 = 7-39, period 2 = 40-72, and period 3 = 73-105 days in milk [DIM]) during early to peak lactation. Visits were clustered in meals based on the estimated meal criterion (28.5 min). The present study yielded the following values for meal frequency, number of visits per meal, meal duration, meal size, daily mealtime, daily dry matter intake (DMI), and feeding rate over the course of the study were 7.61 ± 1.7 (mean ± SD) meals/d, 4.02 ± 1.68 visits/meal, 37.07 ± 13.77 min/meal, 2.96 ± 0.92 kg DM/meal, 272.18 ± 82.14 min/d, 21.46 ± 4.29 kg DM/d, and 85.56 ± 28.77 g DM/min, respectively. Younger cows had more meals per day, more number of visits per meal, longer daily mealtime but a smaller meal size, lower daily DMI, and lower feeding rate compared to older cows (P<0.001). Meal duration and meal size were highly related to the number of visits at feeder per meal (R2=0.55-0.63; P<0.001, R2=0.25-0.39; P<0.001 respectively). In additi