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Supplementation of urea to a basal pasture diet fed to dairy cows to model N-partitioning relationships

The main objective of this study was to investigate whether altering dietary crude protein (CP) through the supplementation of urea to a basal pasture diet fed to dairy cows accurately modeled N-partitioning relationships. To test this, we first needed to establish safe tolerance levels for urea in...

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Autores principales: Hendriks, S.J., Lopez-Villalobos, N., Sheahan, A.J., Donaghy, D.J., Roche, J.R.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9623703/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36337291
http://dx.doi.org/10.3168/jdsc.2020-0016
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author Hendriks, S.J.
Lopez-Villalobos, N.
Sheahan, A.J.
Donaghy, D.J.
Roche, J.R.
author_facet Hendriks, S.J.
Lopez-Villalobos, N.
Sheahan, A.J.
Donaghy, D.J.
Roche, J.R.
author_sort Hendriks, S.J.
collection PubMed
description The main objective of this study was to investigate whether altering dietary crude protein (CP) through the supplementation of urea to a basal pasture diet fed to dairy cows accurately modeled N-partitioning relationships. To test this, we first needed to establish safe tolerance levels for urea in this setting. Fifteen multiparous, rumen-fistulated, mid-lactation Holstein-Friesian dairy cows were offered spring pasture (~20 kg of dry matter/cow per day) and allocated to 1 of 3 urea supplementation treatments: low N [0 g/d urea; 21% total dietary CP of dry matter (DM)], medium N (350 g/d urea; 26% total dietary CP of DM), or high N (690 g/d urea; 31% total dietary CP of DM), in a completely randomized design. The amount of urea provided daily increased gradually for all cows over a 21-d period, with target urea supplementation reached by d 21. Milk yield decreased linearly at a rate of 2.35 kg/100 g of urea intake when urea supplementation exceeded 350 g/d for 4 d (~2% of DM intake). Cows from the low- and medium-N treatments subsequently entered metabolism stalls from d 25 to 31 to collect urine, feces, and milk for total N collection. Estimated urinary N output (g/d) increased linearly with N intake (g/d), and the slope of the relationship (slope = 0.86; R(2) = 0.82) was consistent with international published results. Because of the consistency of our results with previously documented relationships, our findings indicate that supplementation of urea to a basal pasture diet is a suitable technique for modeling different N intakes from pasture diets to evaluate urinary N mitigation strategies. Urea supplementation, however, should not exceed ~2% of DM intake.
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spelling pubmed-96237032022-11-04 Supplementation of urea to a basal pasture diet fed to dairy cows to model N-partitioning relationships Hendriks, S.J. Lopez-Villalobos, N. Sheahan, A.J. Donaghy, D.J. Roche, J.R. JDS Commun Research The main objective of this study was to investigate whether altering dietary crude protein (CP) through the supplementation of urea to a basal pasture diet fed to dairy cows accurately modeled N-partitioning relationships. To test this, we first needed to establish safe tolerance levels for urea in this setting. Fifteen multiparous, rumen-fistulated, mid-lactation Holstein-Friesian dairy cows were offered spring pasture (~20 kg of dry matter/cow per day) and allocated to 1 of 3 urea supplementation treatments: low N [0 g/d urea; 21% total dietary CP of dry matter (DM)], medium N (350 g/d urea; 26% total dietary CP of DM), or high N (690 g/d urea; 31% total dietary CP of DM), in a completely randomized design. The amount of urea provided daily increased gradually for all cows over a 21-d period, with target urea supplementation reached by d 21. Milk yield decreased linearly at a rate of 2.35 kg/100 g of urea intake when urea supplementation exceeded 350 g/d for 4 d (~2% of DM intake). Cows from the low- and medium-N treatments subsequently entered metabolism stalls from d 25 to 31 to collect urine, feces, and milk for total N collection. Estimated urinary N output (g/d) increased linearly with N intake (g/d), and the slope of the relationship (slope = 0.86; R(2) = 0.82) was consistent with international published results. Because of the consistency of our results with previously documented relationships, our findings indicate that supplementation of urea to a basal pasture diet is a suitable technique for modeling different N intakes from pasture diets to evaluate urinary N mitigation strategies. Urea supplementation, however, should not exceed ~2% of DM intake. Elsevier 2020-12-11 /pmc/articles/PMC9623703/ /pubmed/36337291 http://dx.doi.org/10.3168/jdsc.2020-0016 Text en © 2020. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Research
Hendriks, S.J.
Lopez-Villalobos, N.
Sheahan, A.J.
Donaghy, D.J.
Roche, J.R.
Supplementation of urea to a basal pasture diet fed to dairy cows to model N-partitioning relationships
title Supplementation of urea to a basal pasture diet fed to dairy cows to model N-partitioning relationships
title_full Supplementation of urea to a basal pasture diet fed to dairy cows to model N-partitioning relationships
title_fullStr Supplementation of urea to a basal pasture diet fed to dairy cows to model N-partitioning relationships
title_full_unstemmed Supplementation of urea to a basal pasture diet fed to dairy cows to model N-partitioning relationships
title_short Supplementation of urea to a basal pasture diet fed to dairy cows to model N-partitioning relationships
title_sort supplementation of urea to a basal pasture diet fed to dairy cows to model n-partitioning relationships
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9623703/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36337291
http://dx.doi.org/10.3168/jdsc.2020-0016
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