Effect of timing and duration of grazing of growing cattle in the West African Sahel on diet selection, faecal output, eating time, forage intake and live-weight changes and nutrition and performance of cattle

Sixty-four Azawak male weaned calves were allotted to eight treatments (T) in two trials to study the effect of timing (day or day-and-night) and duration of grazing on diet selection, faecal output, eating time, forage intake and weight changes. Grazing time during the day was 6 h for T 1, 2 and 3;...

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Autores principales: Ayantunde, Augustine A., Fernández Rivera, S., Hiernaux, Pierre H.Y., Keulen, H. van, Udo, H.M.J., Chanono, M.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2001
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/1548
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author Ayantunde, Augustine A.
Fernández Rivera, S.
Hiernaux, Pierre H.Y.
Keulen, H. van
Udo, H.M.J.
Chanono, M.
author_browse Ayantunde, Augustine A.
Chanono, M.
Fernández Rivera, S.
Hiernaux, Pierre H.Y.
Keulen, H. van
Udo, H.M.J.
author_facet Ayantunde, Augustine A.
Fernández Rivera, S.
Hiernaux, Pierre H.Y.
Keulen, H. van
Udo, H.M.J.
Chanono, M.
author_sort Ayantunde, Augustine A.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Sixty-four Azawak male weaned calves were allotted to eight treatments (T) in two trials to study the effect of timing (day or day-and-night) and duration of grazing on diet selection, faecal output, eating time, forage intake and weight changes. Grazing time during the day was 6 h for T 1, 2 and 3; 9 h for T 4, 5 and 6; and 12 h for T 7 and 8. Night grazing time was 0 h for T 1, 4 and 7; 3 h for T 2, 5 and 8; and 6 h for T 3 and 6. The trials were conducted from July 1995 to May 1996 covering the wet (WS), early dry (EDS) and late dry (LDS) seasons. Eight oesophageally fistulated steers were used in a cross-over design to sample the diet selected by day-grazers (D1) and by day-and-night-grazers during the day (D2) and at night (N2). Forage intake was determined from individual data on faecal output from all the calves and means of in vitro organic matter digestibility of extrusa of the fistulated steers. Water intake and eating time were measured in LDS. In WS there were no differences (P > 0?05) in the quality of the diet (extrusa) selected for D1, D2 and N2. In LDS, crude protein content for D1 was lower than for D2 (73 v. 79 (s.e. 2) g/kg dry matter, P < 0?05). In all seasons, faecal output and forage intake increased with total duration of grazing. Total time spent eating increased linearly with increasing total time allowed for grazing. These results suggest that allowing additional grazing time during the night leads to increased forage intake and consequently provides an opportunity for better animal production, especially in the dry season.
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spelling CGSpace15482022-01-29T16:18:56Z Effect of timing and duration of grazing of growing cattle in the West African Sahel on diet selection, faecal output, eating time, forage intake and live-weight changes and nutrition and performance of cattle Ayantunde, Augustine A. Fernández Rivera, S. Hiernaux, Pierre H.Y. Keulen, H. van Udo, H.M.J. Chanono, M. Sixty-four Azawak male weaned calves were allotted to eight treatments (T) in two trials to study the effect of timing (day or day-and-night) and duration of grazing on diet selection, faecal output, eating time, forage intake and weight changes. Grazing time during the day was 6 h for T 1, 2 and 3; 9 h for T 4, 5 and 6; and 12 h for T 7 and 8. Night grazing time was 0 h for T 1, 4 and 7; 3 h for T 2, 5 and 8; and 6 h for T 3 and 6. The trials were conducted from July 1995 to May 1996 covering the wet (WS), early dry (EDS) and late dry (LDS) seasons. Eight oesophageally fistulated steers were used in a cross-over design to sample the diet selected by day-grazers (D1) and by day-and-night-grazers during the day (D2) and at night (N2). Forage intake was determined from individual data on faecal output from all the calves and means of in vitro organic matter digestibility of extrusa of the fistulated steers. Water intake and eating time were measured in LDS. In WS there were no differences (P > 0?05) in the quality of the diet (extrusa) selected for D1, D2 and N2. In LDS, crude protein content for D1 was lower than for D2 (73 v. 79 (s.e. 2) g/kg dry matter, P < 0?05). In all seasons, faecal output and forage intake increased with total duration of grazing. Total time spent eating increased linearly with increasing total time allowed for grazing. These results suggest that allowing additional grazing time during the night leads to increased forage intake and consequently provides an opportunity for better animal production, especially in the dry season. 2001-02 2010-05-18T20:27:12Z 2010-05-18T20:27:12Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/1548 en Limited Access Ayantunde, A.A.; Fernández-Rivera, S.; Hiernaux, P.H.Y.; Keulen, H. van; Udo, H.M.J.; Chanono, M. 2001. Effect of timing and duration of grazing of growing cattle in the West African Sahel on diet selection, faecal output, eating time, forage intake and live-weight changes and nutrition and performance of cattle. Animal Science 72(1):117-128.
spellingShingle Ayantunde, Augustine A.
Fernández Rivera, S.
Hiernaux, Pierre H.Y.
Keulen, H. van
Udo, H.M.J.
Chanono, M.
Effect of timing and duration of grazing of growing cattle in the West African Sahel on diet selection, faecal output, eating time, forage intake and live-weight changes and nutrition and performance of cattle
title Effect of timing and duration of grazing of growing cattle in the West African Sahel on diet selection, faecal output, eating time, forage intake and live-weight changes and nutrition and performance of cattle
title_full Effect of timing and duration of grazing of growing cattle in the West African Sahel on diet selection, faecal output, eating time, forage intake and live-weight changes and nutrition and performance of cattle
title_fullStr Effect of timing and duration of grazing of growing cattle in the West African Sahel on diet selection, faecal output, eating time, forage intake and live-weight changes and nutrition and performance of cattle
title_full_unstemmed Effect of timing and duration of grazing of growing cattle in the West African Sahel on diet selection, faecal output, eating time, forage intake and live-weight changes and nutrition and performance of cattle
title_short Effect of timing and duration of grazing of growing cattle in the West African Sahel on diet selection, faecal output, eating time, forage intake and live-weight changes and nutrition and performance of cattle
title_sort effect of timing and duration of grazing of growing cattle in the west african sahel on diet selection faecal output eating time forage intake and live weight changes and nutrition and performance of cattle
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/1548
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