1 / 46

Evaluating the Adequacy of the CNCPS Model

Evaluating the Adequacy of the CNCPS Model. Luis Orlindo Tedeschi Bertha Rueda- Maldonado Francisco “Paco” Juárez-Lagunes. Mexican dual-purpose lactating cow evaluation. BASE DE DATOS. BASE DE DATOS. Digestion Rate of NDF-N in Tropical Forages. F.I. Juarez, A.N. Pell, and J.B. Robertson.

stormy
Download Presentation

Evaluating the Adequacy of the CNCPS Model

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Evaluating the Adequacy of the CNCPS Model Luis Orlindo Tedeschi Bertha Rueda-Maldonado Francisco “Paco” Juárez-Lagunes

  2. Mexican dual-purpose lactating cow evaluation

  3. BASE DE DATOS

  4. BASE DE DATOS

  5. Digestion Rate of NDF-N in Tropical Forages F.I. Juarez, A.N. Pell, and J.B. Robertson. Cornell University INIFAP

  6. Objectives • To measure the NDF-N digestion kinetics of tropical grasses. • To determine the effects of plant maturity and N fertilization on rate and extent of digestion.

  7. Table 1. NDF-N x 6.25 content (%CP).

  8. Table 2. Effect of fertilization on NDF-N x 6.25 (%CP).

  9. Table 3. Effect of Age (days) on NDF-N x 6.25 (%CP).

  10. Table 4. NDF-N x 6.25 of 4 tropical grasses (%CP).

  11. Table 5. NDF and NDF-N x 6.25 extent of digestion (%).

  12. Table 6. NDF and NDF-N x 6.25 rates of digestion (%/h).

  13. N Fertilization and CP, NDF and NDF-N x 6.25.

  14. Table 8. Effect of Age (d) on CP, NDF and NDF-N x 6.25.

  15. CP, NDF and NDF-N x 6.25 of 4 grasses.

  16. Conclusions - 1 • NDF-N as % of CP averaged 35 with a range of 10 - 60. • The NDF-N variation was primarily due to species but N fertilization and maturity also were factors.

  17. Conclusions - 2 • NDF-N is potentially ruminally available. • Extent and rate of NDF-N digestion is affected by fertilization. • NDF-N was digested faster than NDF.

  18. Requirements for accurate prediction in the tropics • Must accurately predict requirements for maintenance, growth, pregnancy, lactation, and energy reserves • Must accurately predict absorbed energy and protein feeds being fed for each specific farm condition • Tabular nutrient requirements and feed values developed in North America are not adequate for the tropics

  19. CNCPS for feed management • Develop a model to predict requirements and feed biological values on each farm • Use the model to identify the factors that are first limiting performance • Energy • Protein • Amino acids • Minerals

  20. CNCPS components for the tropics • Breed adjustments for maintenance, growth, and lactation • Tropical forages CHO and Protein fractions and digestion rates • Dry matter intake equations • Ruminal adjustment for N and branched-chain amino acids deficiencies

  21. Dual-purpose Lactating Cows • Fifty 3/4 Holstein x 1/4 Brahman lactating cows with: • Body weight = 511 kg (550 mature), Condition score = 3, and milk production = 10 kg/d • Rotational grazing Pangola grass and supplemented with 3.5 kg/d of concentrate • From Juarez Lagunes et al. (1999) in J. Dairy Sci. 82:2136

  22. Feed Composition Juarez Lagunes et al. (1999), Table 10

  23. Digestion Rates Juarez Lagunes et al. (1999), Table 10

  24. Sensitivity to NDF and Lignin 1 Lignin = 6% DM. 2 NDF = 70% DM. From Juarez Lagunes et al. (1999), Table 4 Note: ME decreases 1.25 and 0.69 of % units/% of NDF and Lignin increase, respectively

  25. Sensitivity to NDF Digestion Rate 1 CHO A and B1 @ 16%/h. Juarez Lagunes et al. (1999), Table 5

More Related