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Grazing behavior of dairy cows under contrasting pasture allocation frequencies and areas.

L J FarrellC GlasseyC BurkeY Lopez MorenoJ P Edwards
Published in: JDS communications (2024)
This study aimed to compare grazing behavior of dairy cows with highly contrasting pasture allocation frequencies. The study ran from September 9, 2022, to December 2, 2022 (12 wk), during a time when daily pasture growth was expected to exceed daily herd intake. Three pasture allocation frequencies were compared, each with 11 spring-calving cows grazing a 4-ha farmlet. The allocations were high frequency rotational grazing (HFRG; 32.5 m 2 /cow per allocation and 4 allocations/d), rotational grazing with weekly allocations (7RG; 909 m 2 /cow per allocation and each allocated area continuously grazed over 7 d), and continuous grazing (CG; 1,818 m 2 /cow per allocation). Animal behavior was monitored using IceQube accelerometers (Peacock Technology) and CowManager ear tags (Agis Automatisering BV). Milk yield and composition were measured and pasture cover was estimated. Daily eating time was highest for CG animals, whereas lying time, lying bouts, and ruminating time were lowest, with no differences between HFRG and 7RG. There were no differences in fat- and protein-corrected milk yield between farmlets; however, estimated accumulated pasture yield was greater with more frequent allocations. Although milk production did not differ between treatment groups, this appeared to be achieved through greater eating times when allocated pasture less frequently, at the expense of time spent lying.
Keyphrases
  • dairy cows
  • high frequency
  • physical activity
  • transcranial magnetic stimulation
  • adipose tissue
  • weight loss
  • fatty acid
  • small molecule
  • lps induced