Effect of complete diets or separate feeding of long straw and concentrates on the performance of beef cattle

Author(s):  
K D Sinclair ◽  
S Thomas ◽  
A MacDearmid ◽  
G Nemie

In a previous experiment, with different types of straw and different levels of concentrates in mixed diets, it was demonstrated that steers could achieve growth rates in excess of 1.2 kg/day using diets containing up to 0.45 straw, Kay et al (1988). Few farms are equipped for complete diet feeding and so an experiment was set up to ascertain whether similar performances could be achieved when feeding loose-mix concentrates with long straw.Thirty-six Hereford x Friesian heifers of 350 kg initial mean liveweight were allocated to one of four diets. The diets contained ammonia treated or untreated straw of the spring barley variety Doublet and were offered in either a complete mixed form containing 0.45 straw, or as long straw and concentrates fed separately with the concentrate mix consisting of barley, molassed beet pulp, fishmeal, urea, molasses and minerals. Ammonia treatment was carried out in an oven with 0.03 anhydrous ammonia for 24 hours. Complete diets were effected by processing straw through a tub grinder before transfer to a mixer wagon. Complete diets were offered ad libitum. Concentrates in the other diets were offered twice daily at a rate equivalent to that consumed by animals on the complete diets. Liveweight and feed intake data were recorded.

Author(s):  
M. Kay ◽  
G. W. Reid ◽  
E. R. Orskov

Results from a previous experiment with growing steers showed that straw from varieties of winter and spring barley or winter wheat supported different intakes and rates of gain. It was possible to identify those cereal straws most suitable for inclusion in low cost diets for beef cattle. The object of this work was to assess whether complete diets containing a minimum of 35% “good” straw could sustain a high rate of gain in finishing cattle. The trial used 45 Hereford cross steers that weighed 360 kg at the start. There were three types of straw examined; straw from the spring barley variety Corgi, untreated (UC) and ammonia treated (AC) together with ammonia treated winter wheat (AW) cv. Longbow;. Each straw type was included in a complete diet containing either 0.35 (L), 0.45 (M) or 0.55 (H) straw. Ammonia treatment was carried out in an oven with 0.03 anhydrous ammonia for 24 hours. The straw was processed through a tub grinder and the chopped material was transferred to a mixer wagon for diet preparation. All the diets contained fishmeal and urea and equal proportions of rolled barley and molassed sugar beet pulp substituted for the straw. The complete diets were offered ad libitum and the steers were weighed fortnightly until they were estimated to provide carcasses in MLC fat class 4L. Digestibility data for each diet was derived in a subsidary trial using cattle fed ad libitum. The digestibility coefficients for D11 were 0.67 UC; 0.68 AW; 0.69 AC and 0.66 H; 0.68 M; 0.70 L (S.E.D. ± 0.66).


1969 ◽  
Vol 6 (3) ◽  
pp. 505-515 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Orriss

SummaryIn this paper a stochastic model is set up for a certain type of reversible chemical reaction and a solution given for the equilibrium distribution; this solution is then extended to deal with any system of chemical reactions.Three different types of reaction are considered:(1) Several substances Ai react together and give a set of substances Bj. The reaction is reversible, with the substances Ai appearing only on one side of the reaction equation and the substances Bj only on the other.(2) Several different reactions involving the substances Ai and Bj take place simultaneously, but in each reaction equation the substances Ai can appear only on one side and the Bj only on the other.(3) The restriction of the sets Ai and Bj to different sides of the reaction equations is removed: any reaction involving any of the substances Aiand Bj on either side of the equation is permissible.The paper concludes with some applications of the results to problems of molecular adsorption.


1985 ◽  
Vol 65 (2) ◽  
pp. 419-427
Author(s):  
R. S. BUSH ◽  
J. W. G. NICHOLSON ◽  
F. W. CALDER

Three experiments were conducted to determine (1) the effect of cement kiln dust (CKD) on the growth of lambs fed high- or low-roughage diets, (2) the effect of pelleting on lamb diets which contain CKD, and (3) the effect of different levels of dietary CKD on lamb performance. In exp. 1, lambs were fed complete pelleted diets containing 15 or 45% ground timothy hay with either 0 or 3% CKD. There were no differences in weight gain due to CKD addition. The feed consumed was greater for the high roughage-CKD group (P < 0.05). Feed:gain ratios were greater for the high-roughage groups (P < 0.01). The pH of gastrointestinal tract contents showed an increase due to CKD only in the cecum and colon. The carbohydrate level in the colon of lambs fed the low-roughage rations was lower (P < 0.05) with added CKD. In exp. 2, lambs were fed CKD diets in mash and pelleted form, a complete pelleted CKD diet (including hay) or a mash CKD-free control. All diets except the complete pelleted-CKD diet were fed with hay, ad libitum. Lambs fed the pelleted CKD diet plus hay grew faster than the control group (P < 0.05) with growth in the other groups not different from either extreme. In exp. 3, lambs were fed similar diets containing 0, 1, 2 or 3% CKD. Growth was not different for any of the groups. Fecal pH was elevated in two of the CKD groups. Analysis of feces showed no difference in nitrogen, soluble carbohydrate, ADF or NDF as a percent of organic matter. Fecal ash increased with increasing level of CKD (P < 0.01). Key words: Lamb, cement kiln dust, growth rate, digesta pH


1964 ◽  
Vol s3-105 (72) ◽  
pp. 405-414
Author(s):  
M. A. SLEIGH

Water currents set up by flagellar activity are used to bring food particles to the body in each of the sessile flagellates Actinomonas, Codonosiga, Monas, and Poteriodendron. The water currents produced by the 4 organisms are all somewhat different, and, while that set up by Codonosiga is in the expected direction with water flow from the flagellar base towards the tip, the currents set up by the other 3 forms flow from the tip towards the base. In all 4 types the flagellar movements take the form of plane sinusoidal undulations propagated from the base of the flagellum towards its tip, but the different types show adaptive modifications according to the pattern of water currents required. The rates of beat of the flagellum (range 30 to 50 cycles/ sec) and the speeds of propagation of the contraction wave (range 100 to 600 µ/sec) did not differ sufficiently to explain different current patterns. It is suggested that the ‘unexpected’ direction of current flow in 3 of the types may be the result of the presence of flagellar mastigonemes; these are known to be present in the chrysomonad phytoflagellates, to which group Monas and probably also Actinomonas and Poteriodendron belong. Attention is also drawn to the peculiar mode of coiling and unrolling of the flagellum of the bicoecid Poteriodendron.


10.1068/b2676 ◽  
2000 ◽  
Vol 27 (4) ◽  
pp. 537-547 ◽  
Author(s):  
Allen Klinger ◽  
Nikos A Salingaros

In this paper we propose numerical measures for evaluating the aesthetic interest of simple patterns. The patterns consist of elements (symbols, pixels, etc) in regular square arrays. The measures depend on two characteristics of the patterns: the number of different types of element, and the number of symmetries in their arrangement. We define two complementary composite measures L and C for the degree of pattern in a design, and compute them here for 2 × 2 and 6 × 6 arrays. The results distinguish simple from high-variation cases. We suspect that the measure L corresponds to the degree that human beings intuitively feel a design to be “interesting”, so this model would aid in quantifying the visual connection of two-dimensional designs with viewers. The other composite measure C based on these numerical properties characterizes the extent of randomness of an array. Combining symbol variety with symmetry calculations allows us to employ hierarchical scaling to count the relative impact of different levels of scale. By identifying substructures we can distinguish between organized patterns and disorganized complexity. The measures described here are related to verbal descriptors derived from work by psychologists on responses to visual environments.


Author(s):  
J. Amor ◽  
J.P. Barrio ◽  
F.F. Bermúdez

The intake of fibrous food by ruminants are mainly regulated by physical means. When different forages are offered, intake level is related to rumen fill capacity, being the rate of digestion and disappearance of food particles from the rumen also important factors.On the other hand, there have been some reports on the differences in food intake between sheep breeds (Arnold, 1975). Breeds adapted to different nutritional environments could have developed differences in digestive physiology and intake potential.The aim of this experiment was to study the infuence of the type of roughage offered on meal patterns, as well as the differences in these parameters between two Spanish sheep breeds.Ad libitum food intake of non-pregnant and non-lactating ewes (six Churra and six Merino sheep per food) was daily monitored using an automatic recording device that allowed calculation of meal size and duration.


1941 ◽  
Vol 41 (3) ◽  
pp. 260-265 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Stanley Griffith

Subcutaneous inoculations: Two strains of human origin were tested, one was of eugonic human type from the sputum of an English case of pulmonary tuberculosis; the other was of dysgonic human type obtained by Dr J. A. Young from a native in Nigeria. Both strains produced typical general tuberculosis in the hamster, the lesions on the whole showing less caseation than those set up by bovine bacilli (vide 1939).The vole strain of bacillus gave rise to generalized disease resembling tuberculosis. The duration of life of the animal was, however, prolonged and though the bacilli were abundant in the lesions there was no necrosis or caseation. Similar results in two hamsters were reported in 1939.The avian bacillus was the least pathogenic of the four types. Of the three hamsters inoculated only one (H. 17, dose 5·0 mg.) showed macroscopic foci in the liver and spleen; as these were not seen microscopically in sections it is doubtful if they were due to the action of tubercle bacilli. It is unfortunate that the specimens of Hamster 17, which died in my absence from the laboratory, were badly fixed; a smear preparation of the spleen was not made. In the others tubercle bacilli were found in the organs, but were not numerous. The peculiar result after 5·0 mg. of avian bacilli—enormous multiplication of bacilli in spleen, liver and a local gland without macroscopic tuberculous lesions—described in the first paper was not reproduced.Feeding: The four different types of bacilli were given by the mouth to six hamsters, the dose in each instance being 10 mg. of culture. Two of the hamsters, one fed with a potato culture of the vole strain, the other with a human strain, escaped infection. The remaining four hamsters, each fed with one of the four types of bacilli, developed disease, the severity of which in each instance was in harmony with that following subcutaneous inoculation of the type.


1969 ◽  
Vol 6 (03) ◽  
pp. 505-515 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Orriss

Summary In this paper a stochastic model is set up for a certain type of reversible chemical reaction and a solution given for the equilibrium distribution; this solution is then extended to deal with any system of chemical reactions. Three different types of reaction are considered: (1) Several substances Ai react together and give a set of substances Bj. The reaction is reversible, with the substances Ai appearing only on one side of the reaction equation and the substances Bj only on the other. (2) Several different reactions involving the substances Ai and Bj take place simultaneously, but in each reaction equation the substances Ai can appear only on one side and the Bj only on the other. (3) The restriction of the sets Ai and Bj to different sides of the reaction equations is removed: any reaction involving any of the substances Ai and Bj on either side of the equation is permissible. The paper concludes with some applications of the results to problems of molecular adsorption.


Author(s):  
S.A. Schofield ◽  
C.J.C. Phillips

The objective of the experiment was to compare the production and reproductive performance of dairy cows in two environments known to produce large differences in cow behaviour - the cubicle house and straw yard. In addition an injection of prostaglandin analogue was investigated in both environments as it has been previously reported that a post-partum injection.of PGF2 α can improve poor reproductive performance (Knight, 1985).Forty multiparous spring-calving cows were allocated for 12 weeks prepartum and 12 weeks postpartum t0o either a covered strawyard (S) stocked at 0.12 cows/m2 or a cubicle house (C) stocked at 0.17 cows/ m2. One half of each group received an injection PGF2 (P) 21 days post-partum, the other half receiving no injection (N). All cows were offered a complete diet ad libitum (ME 11.9 MJ/kg DM, CP 164g/kg) and results for the animal production and reproduction are presented for the postpartum period, and results for hoof condition presented for the entire winter.


1984 ◽  
Vol 103 (1) ◽  
pp. 171-180 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. H. Phipps ◽  
J. A. Bines ◽  
Rosemary J. Fulford ◽  
R. F. Weller

SummaryOne hundred and ninety-four lactating British Friesian cows were used over a 2-year period to determine the effects of mixing diet ingredients on dry-matter (D.M.) intake, animal performance, digestibility coefficients, rumen fermentation and efficiency of food utilization. Four treatments were imposed in both years and were complete diet and separate ingredients at ad libitum and restricted levels of feeding.In Expt 1 a complete diet at ad libitum and restricted levels of feeding was compared with separate ingredients. The diet consisted of 60% concentrates and 40% forage and contained 20, 20, 10 and 50% on a D.M. basis of maize silage, lucerne silage, dried sugar-beet pulp and dairy compound, respectively. Method and level of feeding were the same in Expt 2; however, the diet in the 2nd year consisted of 50% concentrates (40% dairy compound, 10% dried sugar-beet pulp) and 50% grass silage.In Expt 1 cows fed the complete diet ad libitum consumed 16·5 kg D.M./day which was significantly more than the 14·3 kg/day consumed by those offered the separate ingredients ad libitum. Intakes in Expt 2 were not significantly affected by method of feeding. Much of the difference in Expt 1 was attributed to the fact that many cows rejected lucerne silage when fed in an unmixed form and therefore to keep the concentrate to forage ratio constant other diet ingredients were reduced proportionately.Mixing diet ingredients did not significantly affect milk yields, which were for the complete diet ad libitum and restricted and the separate ingredients ad libitum and restricted 22·2, 22·2; 22·1 and 20·7 kg/day in Expt 1 and 23·6, 20·8; 24·2 and 21·5 kg/ day in Expt 2, respectively. In Expt 1 when the concentrate to forage ratio was 60:40, cows fed the complete diet ad libitum produced milk with a significantly higher milk fat concentration (39·2 g/kg) than those fed the separate ingredients (31·6 g/kg). Similar effects were not recorded in Expt 2 when the concentrate to forage ratio had been reduced to 50:50. Changes in milk protein concentration were more closely related to changes in intake rather than method of feeding. Mixing diet ingredients tended to decrease live-weight loss in early lactation and accelerate live-weight gain in midlactation.In vivo digestibility coefficients determined in lactating dairy cows showed that in Expt 1 the D.M. and organic-matter digestibility coefficients for the complete diets fed ad libitum (0·689 and 0·713) were lower than those recorded (0·712 and 0·732) for the unmixed diet ad libitum. Although the digestibility coefficient of the acid-detergent fibre of the complete diet was markedly higher at 0·519 compared with 0·478 for the separate ingredients, the difference was not significant. In Expt 2 the only difference in digestibility coefficients was that for nitrogen, which for the complete diet was significantly higher than that of the separate ingredients at both levels of feeding.At an ad libitum level of feoding in Expt 1, the molar proportions of acetate and butyrate were 620 and 116 mM/l for the complete diet which were slightly higher than 602 and 95 mM/1 for the separate ingredients ad libitum. This diet also had a slightly higher molar proportion of propionate, 249 compared with the 221 mM/l for the complete diet ad libitum. In Expt 2 there wore no significant differences between treatments for either molar proportions of rumen volatile fatty acids or the ratio of lipogenic to non-lipogenic acids.


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