Publicaties
Effects of partial or full replacement of soybean meal with urea or coated urea on intake, performance, and plasma urea concentrations in lactating dairy cows
Rauch, Rainer; Nichols, Kelly; de Carvalho, Isabela P.C.; Daniel, Jean Baptiste; Martín-Tereso, Javier; Dijkstra, Jan
Samenvatting
We expected mitigation of the hypophagic effects of urea (U) with a coated urea (CU) product that aimed to partially shift urea supply to the post-ruminal gastrointestinal tract. Ruminal release and post-ruminal digestibility of CU was evaluated in vitro, followed by a randomised complete block experiment (54 Holstein-Friesian cows; 177 ± 72 days in milk). Soybean meal (SBM) was partially (PR) or fully (FR) replaced on an isonitrogenous basis by beet pulp and U or CU. Urea sources were included at 12 (U-PR, CU-PR) and 19 (U-FR, CU-FR) g/kg dietary dry matter (DM). Hypophagic effects were similar for U-PR and CU-PR (−11% vs. −7%), and for U-FR and CU-FR (−13% vs. −12%) compared with SBM (average 25.8 kg DM intake/d). Compared with SBM, U-PR and CU-PR reduced yields of milk (−8%) and protein (−12%), U-PR reduced yield of fat (−9%) and fat- and protein-corrected-milk (FPCM; −9%), and CU-PR tended to reduce FPCM yield (−5%). Compared with SBM, U-FR and CU-FR respectively reduced yields of milk (−21%, −22%), protein (−25%, −26%), fat (both −14%), lactose (−20%, −21%), and FPCM (−17%, −19%), and lowered N (−15%, −12%) and feed (−8%, trend, −9%) efficiency. Human-edible protein efficiency approximately doubled with U-PR and CU-PR and approximately tripled with U-FR and CU-FR compared with SBM. Milk composition and plasma urea concentration were similar between U and CU, except for a trend for a greater plasma urea concentration with U-PR compared with CU-PR. Dry matter intake patterns differed for CU-PR compared with U-PR and for CU-FR compared with U-FR, suggesting effects of urea release rate or location on feeding behaviour. Overall, replacing SBM with U or CU reduced DM intake and milk production and affected nutrient efficiencies. Coated urea influenced DM intake pattern but did not affect total DM intake or milk production compared with U.