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Beef Cattle Grazing Native Grasslands May Follow Three Different Supplement Response Patterns.

Authors :
Cazzuli, Fiorella
Durante, Martín
Hirigoyen, Andrés
Sánchez, Javier
Rovira, Pablo
Beretta, Virginia
Simeone, Alvaro
Jaurena, Martín
Savian, Jean Victor
Poppi, Dennis
Montossi, Fabio
Lagomarsino, Ximena
Luzardo, Santiago
Brito, Gustavo
Velazco, José Ignacio
Lattanzi, Fernando Alfredo
Bremm, Carolina
Source :
Grasses (2813-3463); Sep2023, Vol. 2 Issue 3, p168-184, 17p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Previous studies on winter supplementation of growing cattle grazing stockpiled native Campos grasslands suggest that forage allowance (FA), herbage mass, and weather conditions before and during the supplementation period could all affect supplement feed efficiency (SFE)—that is, the difference or change in average daily gain (ADG) between supplemented (S) and control (C) animals (ADGchng, kg) per unit (kg) of supplement dry matter (DM) intake. In this study, we analyse data from fifteen collated winter supplementation trials carried out in Uruguay between 2004 and 2018. The working hypotheses of this research paper were: (i) that average substitution rates are positive, and (ii) that ADGchng is not constant throughout the supplementation period and that its variation may be attributed to sward, animal or weather variables. There were two main objectives: (i) to estimate the average supplement substitution rate (sSbR, kg forage, f, dry matter, DM intake reduction: kg supplement DM intake) and potential herbage intake substitution rate (hSbR, kg fDM intake reduction: kg fDM intake of control animals), and its association with SFE, and, (ii) to assess the existence of different phases and supplementation response patterns and its association with other relevant variables. Estimated substitution rates were always positive (sSbR = 0.3–1.1 kg/kg; hSbR = 0.1–0.3 kg/kg) and were negatively and moderately associated with SFE. Supplementation proved to be a dynamic process where three possible supplementation responses over the supplementation period were identified (linear, quadratic and Weibull). While linear patterns did not appear distinctly associated with any particular set of variables, quadratic models were mostly associated with herbage biomass and substitution rates, whereas Weibull models were the clearest in their association with frosts. Regardless of the response pattern, at the beginning of the trials it was the animals' body weight and supplement quality that most influenced supplement response, whereas towards the end, supplementation intake, supplemented animals' ADG and forage quality played a more relevant role. The estimated parameters and response patterns are expected to be used as inputs in decision support systems for livestock farmers in the future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
28133463
Volume :
2
Issue :
3
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Grasses (2813-3463)
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
172394810
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/grasses2030014