Nutrient digestibility, fecal output and eating behavior for different cattle background feeding strategies

Citation

Klinger, S.A., Block, H.C., and McKinnon, J.J. (2007). "Nutrient digestibility, fecal output and eating behaviour for different cattle background feeding strategies.", Canadian Journal of Animal Science, 87(3), pp. 393-399. doi : 10.4141/A06-070

Abstract

To examine the effects of limit feeding a high-grain barley-based diet to growing cattle on nutrient digestibility, fecal DM out put and eating behavior, sixteen crossbred steers (326 ± 42.1 kg) housed in individual indoor pens were fed one of two feeding regimes in a randomized complete block design. Dietary treatments included a high-grain diet containing 1.94 Mcal NE m and 1.27 Mcal NEg kg-1 of DM and limit-fed to achieve similar NE intake to an ad libitum-fed high-forage diet containing 1.57 Mcal NEm and 0.97 Mcal NEg kg-1 DM. Chromic oxide was used to determine nutrient digestibility and fecal output. The limit-fed high-grain diet reduced (P < 0.05) fecal DM output (1.1 vs. 1.6 kg DM d-1) and improved (P < 0.05) apparent DM digestibility (82.8 vs. 79.4%) relative to the ad libitum-fed high-forage diet. Crude protein digestibility was similar (P > 0.05) across treatments; however, fiber digestibility was poorer (P < 0.05) for the limitfed high-grain than the ad libitum-fed high-forage diet. The high-grain limit-fed cattle spent less (P < 0.05) time eating and ruminating than the ad libitum-fed high-forage cattle. These results indicate that limit feeding a high-grain barley-based diet to backgrounding cattle can improve feed efficiency and nutrient digestibility and reduce fecal DM output while targeting the same gain as an ad libitum-fed high forage backgrounding diet.

Publication date

2007-01-01

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