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Grazing Preference of Dairy Cows and Pasture Productivity for Different Cultivars of Perennial Ryegrass under Contrasting Managements

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Increasing soluble sugars in pasture species can lead to an improved nutrient use efficiency in the rumen and a greater digestibility of forage, which in turn might increase pasture intake. However, this improvement in nutritional value must not be at the expense of pasture productiv...

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Autores principales: Rivero, M. Jordana, Balocchi, Oscar L., Neumann, Fabián L., Siebald, Juan A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6562485/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31137542
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani9050253
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author Rivero, M. Jordana
Balocchi, Oscar L.
Neumann, Fabián L.
Siebald, Juan A.
author_facet Rivero, M. Jordana
Balocchi, Oscar L.
Neumann, Fabián L.
Siebald, Juan A.
author_sort Rivero, M. Jordana
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: Increasing soluble sugars in pasture species can lead to an improved nutrient use efficiency in the rumen and a greater digestibility of forage, which in turn might increase pasture intake. However, this improvement in nutritional value must not be at the expense of pasture productivity; the amount of nutrients harvested is a relevant factor in ruminant grazing systems’ efficiency. Therefore, we tested four different cultivars of perennial ryegrass (two selected for greater soluble sugar content and two standard cultivars) submitted to two contrasting managements (one aimed at improving sugar content and one with the opposite intended effect) for their effects on pasture productivity (by cutting herbage every time the plots reached the target number of leaves per tiller, i.e., two or three) and the grazing preference of dairy cows (six cows grazed for up to 5 hours, in an experimental area with three plots for each of the eight treatments) in spring, summer and autumn. We found that high sugar grasses had lower annual dry matter productivity and no preference was shown by cows, although the agronomic management aimed at reducing sugar concentration enhanced crude protein concentration and increased the herbage harvested (greater preference) in the three seasons, and the time spent grazing in autumn. ABSTRACT: The objective of this study was to evaluate the pasture performance of different cultivars of perennial ryegrass, two “high sugar” and two standard cultivars, under two contrasting agronomic managements (aimed at either decreasing or increasing water soluble carbohydrates concentration), and their effects on the grazing preference of dairy cows. Eight treatments arising from the factorial combination of four cultivars and two managements were randomly applied to 31-m(2) plots in three blocks. Pasture dry matter production and growth rate were measured for one year. Three grazing assessments were performed to establish the grazing preferences of six dairy cows in spring, summer and autumn. High sugar cultivars produced less dry matter per hectare than the standard cultivars. Cows consumed more grass and harvested a greater proportion of the pasture under the agronomic management aimed at decreasing sugar concentration, i.e., with a greater nitrogen fertilization rate and under a more frequent defoliation regime, which could be explained by the greater crude protein concentration achieved under this management. The results suggest that the genetic selection for greater levels of sugars was at the expense of herbage yield, and that cows preferred to graze herbage with a greater crude protein level instead of a greater sugar concentration.
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spelling pubmed-65624852019-06-17 Grazing Preference of Dairy Cows and Pasture Productivity for Different Cultivars of Perennial Ryegrass under Contrasting Managements Rivero, M. Jordana Balocchi, Oscar L. Neumann, Fabián L. Siebald, Juan A. Animals (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: Increasing soluble sugars in pasture species can lead to an improved nutrient use efficiency in the rumen and a greater digestibility of forage, which in turn might increase pasture intake. However, this improvement in nutritional value must not be at the expense of pasture productivity; the amount of nutrients harvested is a relevant factor in ruminant grazing systems’ efficiency. Therefore, we tested four different cultivars of perennial ryegrass (two selected for greater soluble sugar content and two standard cultivars) submitted to two contrasting managements (one aimed at improving sugar content and one with the opposite intended effect) for their effects on pasture productivity (by cutting herbage every time the plots reached the target number of leaves per tiller, i.e., two or three) and the grazing preference of dairy cows (six cows grazed for up to 5 hours, in an experimental area with three plots for each of the eight treatments) in spring, summer and autumn. We found that high sugar grasses had lower annual dry matter productivity and no preference was shown by cows, although the agronomic management aimed at reducing sugar concentration enhanced crude protein concentration and increased the herbage harvested (greater preference) in the three seasons, and the time spent grazing in autumn. ABSTRACT: The objective of this study was to evaluate the pasture performance of different cultivars of perennial ryegrass, two “high sugar” and two standard cultivars, under two contrasting agronomic managements (aimed at either decreasing or increasing water soluble carbohydrates concentration), and their effects on the grazing preference of dairy cows. Eight treatments arising from the factorial combination of four cultivars and two managements were randomly applied to 31-m(2) plots in three blocks. Pasture dry matter production and growth rate were measured for one year. Three grazing assessments were performed to establish the grazing preferences of six dairy cows in spring, summer and autumn. High sugar cultivars produced less dry matter per hectare than the standard cultivars. Cows consumed more grass and harvested a greater proportion of the pasture under the agronomic management aimed at decreasing sugar concentration, i.e., with a greater nitrogen fertilization rate and under a more frequent defoliation regime, which could be explained by the greater crude protein concentration achieved under this management. The results suggest that the genetic selection for greater levels of sugars was at the expense of herbage yield, and that cows preferred to graze herbage with a greater crude protein level instead of a greater sugar concentration. MDPI 2019-05-20 /pmc/articles/PMC6562485/ /pubmed/31137542 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani9050253 Text en © 2019 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Rivero, M. Jordana
Balocchi, Oscar L.
Neumann, Fabián L.
Siebald, Juan A.
Grazing Preference of Dairy Cows and Pasture Productivity for Different Cultivars of Perennial Ryegrass under Contrasting Managements
title Grazing Preference of Dairy Cows and Pasture Productivity for Different Cultivars of Perennial Ryegrass under Contrasting Managements
title_full Grazing Preference of Dairy Cows and Pasture Productivity for Different Cultivars of Perennial Ryegrass under Contrasting Managements
title_fullStr Grazing Preference of Dairy Cows and Pasture Productivity for Different Cultivars of Perennial Ryegrass under Contrasting Managements
title_full_unstemmed Grazing Preference of Dairy Cows and Pasture Productivity for Different Cultivars of Perennial Ryegrass under Contrasting Managements
title_short Grazing Preference of Dairy Cows and Pasture Productivity for Different Cultivars of Perennial Ryegrass under Contrasting Managements
title_sort grazing preference of dairy cows and pasture productivity for different cultivars of perennial ryegrass under contrasting managements
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6562485/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31137542
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani9050253
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