Effects of supplementary feeding and suckling intensity on postpartum reproductive performance of small East African Zebu cows

Small East African Zebu cows which calved during the dry season were used to determine the effects of postpartum nutritional supplementation and suckling intensity on body weight, body condition score, reproductive performance and on calf mortality and preweaning growth performance. Cows were alloca...

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Autores principales: Tegegne, Azage, Entwistle, K.W., Mukasa-Mugerwa, E.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Elsevier 1992
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/29665
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author Tegegne, Azage
Entwistle, K.W.
Mukasa-Mugerwa, E.
author_browse Entwistle, K.W.
Mukasa-Mugerwa, E.
Tegegne, Azage
author_facet Tegegne, Azage
Entwistle, K.W.
Mukasa-Mugerwa, E.
author_sort Tegegne, Azage
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Small East African Zebu cows which calved during the dry season were used to determine the effects of postpartum nutritional supplementation and suckling intensity on body weight, body condition score, reproductive performance and on calf mortality and preweaning growth performance. Cows were allocated based on calving body weight to either receive a supplementary feed of molasses blocks containing 10 percent urea or to serve as controls and to be grazed only. Within nutritional groups, cows were further assigned either to continuous suckling or to restricted suckling twice daily. Intact bulls were introduced 21 days after the first cow had calved. Calving body weight and body condition score of dams did not differ among the treatment groups. Supplementary feeding reduced calf mortality by 20 percent while restricted suckling reduced mortality by 13 percent. Body weight and body condition score did not vary between groups during the supplementation period. Over the 8-month period when data were collected, 65 percent of supplemented and 53 percent of control cows exhibited estrus. Larger percentage of restricted suckled cows showed estrus than of continuously suckled cows. The postpartum estrus interval was shorter by 54 days in supplemented than in control cows and by 13 days in restricted than in continuously suckled cows. The pregnancy rate was higher in supplemented than in control cows and in restricted than in continuously suckled cows.
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spelling CGSpace296652025-05-12T14:58:39Z Effects of supplementary feeding and suckling intensity on postpartum reproductive performance of small East African Zebu cows Tegegne, Azage Entwistle, K.W. Mukasa-Mugerwa, E. zebu cattle supplementary feeding reproductive performance suckling animal nutrition mortality cows body weight calves growth Small East African Zebu cows which calved during the dry season were used to determine the effects of postpartum nutritional supplementation and suckling intensity on body weight, body condition score, reproductive performance and on calf mortality and preweaning growth performance. Cows were allocated based on calving body weight to either receive a supplementary feed of molasses blocks containing 10 percent urea or to serve as controls and to be grazed only. Within nutritional groups, cows were further assigned either to continuous suckling or to restricted suckling twice daily. Intact bulls were introduced 21 days after the first cow had calved. Calving body weight and body condition score of dams did not differ among the treatment groups. Supplementary feeding reduced calf mortality by 20 percent while restricted suckling reduced mortality by 13 percent. Body weight and body condition score did not vary between groups during the supplementation period. Over the 8-month period when data were collected, 65 percent of supplemented and 53 percent of control cows exhibited estrus. Larger percentage of restricted suckled cows showed estrus than of continuously suckled cows. The postpartum estrus interval was shorter by 54 days in supplemented than in control cows and by 13 days in restricted than in continuously suckled cows. The pregnancy rate was higher in supplemented than in control cows and in restricted than in continuously suckled cows. 1992-07 2013-06-11T09:24:24Z 2013-06-11T09:24:24Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/29665 en Limited Access Elsevier Tegegne, A.; Entwistle, K. W.; Mukasa-Mugerwa, E. Effects of Supplementary Feeding and Suckling Intensity on Postpartum Reproductive Performance of Small East African Zebu Cows. Theriogenology, 1992, 38(1):97–106. https://doi.org/10.1016/0093-691x(92)90221-c.
spellingShingle zebu cattle
supplementary feeding
reproductive performance
suckling
animal nutrition
mortality
cows
body weight
calves
growth
Tegegne, Azage
Entwistle, K.W.
Mukasa-Mugerwa, E.
Effects of supplementary feeding and suckling intensity on postpartum reproductive performance of small East African Zebu cows
title Effects of supplementary feeding and suckling intensity on postpartum reproductive performance of small East African Zebu cows
title_full Effects of supplementary feeding and suckling intensity on postpartum reproductive performance of small East African Zebu cows
title_fullStr Effects of supplementary feeding and suckling intensity on postpartum reproductive performance of small East African Zebu cows
title_full_unstemmed Effects of supplementary feeding and suckling intensity on postpartum reproductive performance of small East African Zebu cows
title_short Effects of supplementary feeding and suckling intensity on postpartum reproductive performance of small East African Zebu cows
title_sort effects of supplementary feeding and suckling intensity on postpartum reproductive performance of small east african zebu cows
topic zebu cattle
supplementary feeding
reproductive performance
suckling
animal nutrition
mortality
cows
body weight
calves
growth
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/29665
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