Diurnal Concentration of Urinary Nitrogen and Rumen Ammonia Are Modified by Timing and Mass of Herbage Allocation

Beltran, Ignacio E.; Gregorini, Pablo; Daza, Jose; Balocchi, Oscar A.; Morales, Alvaro; Pulido, Ruben G.

Abstract

Simple Summary Low nitrogen use efficiency in grazing dairy cows leads to high urinary N excretion, which contributes to greenhouse gases emission. This problem has been associated with high N and low energy intake, increasing rumen ammonia (NH3) concentration, and thereby, increasing urinary N excretion. Under this situation, it is important to discover nutritional and grazing management strategies that allow reduced urine N excretion in the pasture. This study evaluated whether changes in time of herbage allocation and herbage mass modify the diurnal pattern of urinary nitrogen (N) concentration and ruminal NH3 of lactating dairy cows. We found that the combination of time of herbage allocation and herbage mass modified rumen NH3 production and urinary N concentration. Results suggest that maintaining cows in the holding pen at the milking parlor for two hours after morning and afternoon milking could allow collection of urine from cows in the slurry pit during peak N concentration, returning cows to the pasture at a time of day when urinary N concentration is decreased. Abstract The objective of this work was to evaluate whether changes in time of herbage allocation and herbage mass (HM) (low (L) or medium (M)) modify the diurnal pattern of urinary nitrogen (N) concentration and ruminal ammonia (NH3) of lactating dairy cows. Four Holstein-Friesian cows fitted with rumen cannula were randomly allocated to one of four treatments: 1) low herbage mass in the morning (L-AM) (Access to new herbage allocation after morning milking with a herbage mass (HM) of 2000 kg DM/ha); 2) low herbage mass in the afternoon (L-PM) (Access to new herbage allocation after afternoon milking with a HM of 2000 kg DM/ha); 3) medium herbage mass in the morning (M-AM) (Access to new herbage allocation after morning milking with a HM of 3000 kg DM/ha); and 4) medium herbage mass in the afternoon (M-PM) (Access to new herbage allocation after afternoon milking with a HM of 3000 kg DM/ha). A four by four Latin Square design with four treatments, four cows, and four experimental periods was used to evaluate treatment effects. Rumen NH3 concentration was greater for L-AM compared to L-PM and M-PM at 13:00 and 16:00 h. Urine urea and N concentrations were lower for M-AM compared to L-AM. Urine N concentration was greater for L-AM than other treatments at 10:00 hours and greater for M-PM compared to M-AM at 16:00 hours. Results suggest that maintaining the cows in the holding pen at the milking parlor for two hours after morning grass silage supplementation for L-AM and for two hours after afternoon grass silage supplementation for M-PM, could allow collection of urine from cows at the holding pen and storage of urine in the slurry pit during the time of peak N concentration, returning cows to the pasture at a time of day when urinary N concentration is decreased.

Más información

Título según WOS: Diurnal Concentration of Urinary Nitrogen and Rumen Ammonia Are Modified by Timing and Mass of Herbage Allocation
Título según SCOPUS: Diurnal concentration of urinary nitrogen and rumen ammonia are modified by timing and mass of herbage allocation
Título de la Revista: Animals
Volumen: 9
Número: 11
Editorial: MDPI
Fecha de publicación: 2019
Idioma: English
DOI:

10.3390/ani9110961

Notas: ISI, SCOPUS