Effect of forage-to-concentrate ratio in dairy cow diets on emission of methane, carbon dioxide, and ammonia, lactation performance, and manure excretion

被引:199
|
作者
Aguerre, M. J. [1 ]
Wattiaux, M. A. [1 ]
Powell, J. M. [2 ]
Broderick, G. A. [2 ]
Arndt, C. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Wisconsin, Dept Dairy Sci, Madison, WI 53706 USA
[2] ARS, USDA, US Dairy Forage Res Ctr, Madison, WI 53706 USA
关键词
methane; ammonia; forage; dairy cow; VOLATILE FATTY-ACID; RUMEN FERMENTATION; MILK-PRODUCTION; UREA CONCENTRATION; HOLSTEIN HEIFERS; BEEF-CATTLE; CORN-SILAGE; FEED-INTAKE; NITROGEN; PROTEIN;
D O I
10.3168/jds.2010-4011
中图分类号
S8 [畜牧、 动物医学、狩猎、蚕、蜂];
学科分类号
0905 ;
摘要
Holstein cows housed in a modified tie-stall barn were used to determine the effect of feeding diets with different forage-to-concentrate ratios (F:C) on performance and emission of CH(4), CO(2) and manure NH(3)-N. Eight multiparous cows (means +/- standard deviation): 620 +/- 68 kg of body weight; 52 +/- 34 d in milk and 8 primiparous cows (546 +/- 38 kg of body weight; 93 +/- 39 d in milk) were randomly assigned to 1 of 4 airflow controlled chambers, constructed to fit 4 cows each. Chambers were assigned to dietary treatment sequences in a single 4 x 4 Latin square design. Dietary treatments, fed as 16.2% crude protein total mixed rations included the following F:C ratio: 47:53, 54:46, 61:39, and 68:32 [diet dry matter (DM) basis]. Forage consisted of alfalfa silage and corn silage in a 1:1 ratio. Cow performance and emission data were measured on the last 7 d and the last 4 d, respectively of each 21-d period. Air samples entering and exiting each chamber were analyzed with a photo-acoustic field gas monitor. In a companion study, fermentation pattern was studied in 8 rumen-cannulated cows. Increasing F:C ratio in the diet had no effect on DM intake (21.1 +/- 1.5 kg/d), energy-corrected milk (ECM, 37.4 +/- 2.2 kg/d), ECM/DM intake (1.81 +/- 0.18), yield of milk fat, and manure excretion and composition; however, it increased milk fat content linearly by 7% and decreased linearly true protein, lactose; and solids-not-fat content (by 4, 1, and 2%, respectively) and yield (by 10, 6, and 6%, respectively), and milk N-to-N intake ratio. On average 93% of the N consumed by the cows in the chambers was accounted for as milk N, manure N, or emitted NH(3)-N. Increasing the F:C ratio also increased ruminal pH linearly and affected concentrations of butyrate and isovalerate quadratically. Increasing the F:C ratio from 47:53 to 68:32 increased CH(4) emission from 538 to 648 g/cow per day, but had no effect on manure NH(3)-N emission (14.1 +/- 3.9 g/cow per day) and CO2 emission (18,325 +/- 2,241 g/cow per day). In this trial, CH(4) emission remained constant per unit of neutral detergent fiber intake (1 g of CH(4) was emitted for every 10.3 g of neutral detergent fiber consumed by the cow), but increased from 14.4 to 18.0 g/kg of ECM when the percentage of forage in the diet increased from 47 to 68%. Although the pattern of emission within a day was distinct for each gas, emissions were higher between morning feeding (0930 h) and afternoon milking (1600 h) than later in the day. Altering the level of forage within a practical range and rebalancing dietary crude protein with common feeds of the Midwest of the United States had no effects on manure NH(3)-N emission but altered CH(4) emission.
引用
收藏
页码:3081 / 3093
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Emissions of ammonia, nitrous oxide, methane, and carbon dioxide during storage of dairy cow manure as affected by dietary forage-to-concentrate ratio and crust formation
    Aguerre, M. J.
    Wattiaux, M. A.
    Powell, J. M.
    JOURNAL OF DAIRY SCIENCE, 2012, 95 (12) : 7409 - 7416
  • [2] Effect of forage source of dairy cow diets on methane emission from enteric fermentation and manure storage.
    Hassanat, F.
    Benchaar, C.
    JOURNAL OF ANIMAL SCIENCE, 2016, 94 : 570 - 571
  • [3] The Effect of γ-Aminobutyric Acid Addition on In Vitro Ruminal Fermentation Characteristics and Methane Production of Diets Differing in Forage-to-Concentrate Ratio
    Wang, Yan-Lu
    Zhang, Zhi-Hui
    Wang, Wei-Kang
    Wu, Qi-Chao
    Zhang, Fan
    Li, Wen-Juan
    Li, Sheng-Li
    Wang, Wei
    Cao, Zhi-Jun
    Yang, Hong-Jian
    FERMENTATION-BASEL, 2023, 9 (02):
  • [4] Animal performance, and enteric methane, manure methane and nitrous oxide emissions from Murrah buffalo calves fed diets with different forage-to-concentrate ratios
    Nampoothiri, Vinu M.
    Mohini, Madhu
    Malla, Bilal A.
    Mondal, Goutam
    Pandita, Sujata
    ANIMAL PRODUCTION SCIENCE, 2020, 60 (06) : 780 - 789
  • [5] In vitro Effect of the Inorganic Buffers in the Diets of Holstein Dairy Cow Varying in Forage: Concentrate Ratios on the Rumen Acid Load and Methane Emission
    Fadaee, S.
    Mesgaran, M. Danesh
    Vakili, A.
    IRANIAN JOURNAL OF APPLIED ANIMAL SCIENCE, 2021, 11 (03): : 485 - 496
  • [6] Effect of Changing the Ratio of Forage to Concentrate on Ammonia Emissions by Dairy Heifers
    Lascano, G. J.
    Zanton, G. I.
    Moody, M. L.
    Topper, P. A.
    Wheeler, E. F.
    Heinrichs, A. J.
    JOURNAL OF DAIRY SCIENCE, 2008, 91 (11) : 4301 - 4306
  • [7] Investigations on the effect of a niacin supplementation to three diets differing in forage-to-concentrate ratio on several blood and milk variables of dairy cows
    Niehoff, Inka-Donata
    Huether, Liane
    Lebzien, Peter
    Bigalke, Wiebke
    Daenicke, Sven
    Flachowsky, Gerhard
    ARCHIVES OF ANIMAL NUTRITION, 2009, 63 (03) : 203 - 218
  • [8] EFFECT OF FORAGE-TO-CONCENTRATE RATIO IN COMPLETE FEEDS AND FEED-INTAKE ON DIGESTION OF STARCH BY DAIRY-COWS
    WHEELER, WE
    NOLLER, CH
    COPPOCK, CE
    JOURNAL OF DAIRY SCIENCE, 1975, 58 (12) : 1902 - 1906
  • [9] Changes in nutrient balance, methane emissions, physiologic biomarkers, and production performance in goats fed different forage-to-concentrate ratios during lactation
    Fernandez, Carlos
    Hernandez, Alberto
    Gomis-Tena, Julio
    Loor, Juan J.
    JOURNAL OF ANIMAL SCIENCE, 2021, 99 (07)
  • [10] Modeling temperature and moisture dependent emissions of carbon dioxide and methane from drying dairy cow manure
    Enzhu HU
    Pakorn SUTITARNNONTR
    Markus TULLER
    Scott B.JONES
    FrontiersofAgriculturalScienceandEngineering, 2018, 5 (02) : 280 - 286