An assessment of the biological and economic efficiency in conversion of milk to growth in N'Dama calves

Two groups of light N'Dama calves were fed different quantities of milk from birth to 10 months of age to compare efficiencies fo converting milk to live-weight gain, and to assess the economic efficiencies of the two feeding regimes. Group one receives an average of 347 kg per calf, with a daily an...

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Autores principales: Agyemang, K., Clifford, K., Little, D.A.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Cambridge University Press 1993
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/28260
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author Agyemang, K.
Clifford, K.
Little, D.A.
author_browse Agyemang, K.
Clifford, K.
Little, D.A.
author_facet Agyemang, K.
Clifford, K.
Little, D.A.
author_sort Agyemang, K.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Two groups of light N'Dama calves were fed different quantities of milk from birth to 10 months of age to compare efficiencies fo converting milk to live-weight gain, and to assess the economic efficiencies of the two feeding regimes. Group one receives an average of 347 kg per calf, with a daily and seasonal pattern of feeding designed to stimulate a village production system where calves have access to only part of the milk produced by their dams, the rest being extracted from human consumptions. Group Two received an average of 617 kg per calf, and simulated situations where no milk is extracted such as in a ranch or station - type of operation. During the first 6 months, when growth was certainly mediated only by milk, and live-weight gains were consistently positive at 151 and 262 g/day in groups 1 and 2 respectively, the biological conversion of milk to live weight did not differ between groups (8.7 8.8 kg milk per kg live-weight gain). When the two groups were compared over the same weight range to remove possible effects of variable maintainance requirements, the conversion efficiencies again did not differ significantly. Over the whole 10-month period the biological conversion factors were slightly less favourable but still not different between groups (9.5 9.4 kg/kg). When monetary values of milk and live weight at formgate prices were applied to quantities of milk consumed and calf live-weight increases, the cost efficiency of group 1 was superior to that of group 2. Based on these findings and results from other on-farm experiments in The Gambia, it was concluded that the current practice of partial milk extraction as occurs in the village production system is a logical approach for profit maximization.
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spelling CGSpace282602024-11-15T08:52:22Z An assessment of the biological and economic efficiency in conversion of milk to growth in N'Dama calves Agyemang, K. Clifford, K. Little, D.A. animal production calves ndama cattle milk feeding growth economic analysis live weight Two groups of light N'Dama calves were fed different quantities of milk from birth to 10 months of age to compare efficiencies fo converting milk to live-weight gain, and to assess the economic efficiencies of the two feeding regimes. Group one receives an average of 347 kg per calf, with a daily and seasonal pattern of feeding designed to stimulate a village production system where calves have access to only part of the milk produced by their dams, the rest being extracted from human consumptions. Group Two received an average of 617 kg per calf, and simulated situations where no milk is extracted such as in a ranch or station - type of operation. During the first 6 months, when growth was certainly mediated only by milk, and live-weight gains were consistently positive at 151 and 262 g/day in groups 1 and 2 respectively, the biological conversion of milk to live weight did not differ between groups (8.7 8.8 kg milk per kg live-weight gain). When the two groups were compared over the same weight range to remove possible effects of variable maintainance requirements, the conversion efficiencies again did not differ significantly. Over the whole 10-month period the biological conversion factors were slightly less favourable but still not different between groups (9.5 9.4 kg/kg). When monetary values of milk and live weight at formgate prices were applied to quantities of milk consumed and calf live-weight increases, the cost efficiency of group 1 was superior to that of group 2. Based on these findings and results from other on-farm experiments in The Gambia, it was concluded that the current practice of partial milk extraction as occurs in the village production system is a logical approach for profit maximization. 1993-04 2013-05-06T07:00:15Z 2013-05-06T07:00:15Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/28260 en Limited Access Cambridge University Press Animal Production;56(pt. 2): 165-170
spellingShingle animal production
calves
ndama cattle
milk feeding
growth
economic analysis
live weight
Agyemang, K.
Clifford, K.
Little, D.A.
An assessment of the biological and economic efficiency in conversion of milk to growth in N'Dama calves
title An assessment of the biological and economic efficiency in conversion of milk to growth in N'Dama calves
title_full An assessment of the biological and economic efficiency in conversion of milk to growth in N'Dama calves
title_fullStr An assessment of the biological and economic efficiency in conversion of milk to growth in N'Dama calves
title_full_unstemmed An assessment of the biological and economic efficiency in conversion of milk to growth in N'Dama calves
title_short An assessment of the biological and economic efficiency in conversion of milk to growth in N'Dama calves
title_sort assessment of the biological and economic efficiency in conversion of milk to growth in n dama calves
topic animal production
calves
ndama cattle
milk feeding
growth
economic analysis
live weight
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/28260
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