Effect of different feeding strategies in intensive dairy farming systems on milk fatty acid profiles, and implications on feeding costs in Italy
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2013
Abstract:
The aim of this work was to characterize the fatty
acid (FA) profile of milk from intensive dairy farming
systems in the Po Plain (Italy) to estimate the costs
of the adopted feeding strategies and to simulate the
effect of supplementary premiums on the basis of milk
FA composition on milk income. Twenty dairy farms
with 5 different feeding strategies were studied: 3 corn
silage-based systems in which cows were supplemented
with a great proportion (CCH), a medium proportion
(CCM), or without commercial concentrate mix (CC0),
and 2 systems in which part of corn silage was replaced
with grass or legume silage (HF) or with fresh herbage
(G), cut and fed indoors. Bulk milk was sampled and
lactating cow performance, feeding strategies and forage characteristics were recorded through a survey, 3 times during a year. The milk FA supplementary premium was calculated considering C18:3n-3 and saturated FA (SFA) concentrations, and ratio of total cis C18:1 isomers to C16:0. The CCH, CCM, and CC0 systems bought most of their dairy cow feeds off farm, which allowed them to increase milk production to 35,000 L/yr per hectare. Their low dry matter and crude protein self-sufficiency led to higher feeding costs per liter of milk (from €0.158 to €0.184), and highest income over feed cost was achieved only for milk yield performance greater than 10,000 kg/cow per year. The use of homegrown forages in HF and G increased dry matter and crude protein self-sufficiency and reduced the feeding costs per liter of milk from 9 to 22%, compared with the other studied systems, making HF and G feeding economically competitive, even for a lower milk yield per cow. The studied systems highlighted a remarkable variation in FA profiles. The concentrations of C16:0 and SFA were the highest in CCH (31.53 and 67.84 g/100 g of FA) and G (31.23 and 68.45 g/100 g of FA), because of the larger proportion of commercial concentrate mix in the cow diet. The concentrations of C16:0 and SFA were the lowest in CCM (27.86 and 63.10 g/100 g of FA), because of low roughage-to-concentrate ratio in the cow diet, which is known to favor milk fat depression, affecting particularly these FA. The calculated supplementary premium was the highest in the CCM system, based on milk FA profiles from those herds. The HF diet was rich in forages and resulted in greater concentration of C18:3n-3 in milk (0.57 g/100 g of FA) than the other systems and thus led to an increase in milk FA supplementary premium. Milk from G and HF milk had the lowest ratio of Σn-6:Σn-3 FA compared with milk from the systems based on higher corn silage proportion in the cow diet (3.71, and 3.25, respectively, vs. 4.58 to 4.78), with the lower ratios being closer to recommendation for human nutrition.
Tipologia CRIS:
03A-Articolo su Rivista
Keywords:
Feeding costs; Intensive farming system; Milk fatty acid; Milk fatty acid supplementary premium
Elenco autori:
Borreani G.; Coppa M.; Revello-Chion A.; Comino L.; Giaccone D.; Ferlay A.; Tabacco E.;
Link alla scheda completa:
Pubblicato in: