Effects of supplementation of molassed natural pasture hay with urea, and of water intake restriction on feed intakes by Zebu cattle in the semi-arid zone of Mali

The effects on intake of water availability and urea addition to rations based on molassed natural pasture hay and dry cowpea haulm were measured using 6 mature castrated male Zebu cattle of 343 kg mean iveweight, in an experiment carried out during the dry season in the semi-arid zone of central Ma...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Bartholomew, P.W., Traoré, B., Nantoume, H., Koné, N'G., Ly, R.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Springer 1996
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/29764
_version_ 1855537347961028608
author Bartholomew, P.W.
Traoré, B.
Nantoume, H.
Koné, N'G.
Ly, R.
author_browse Bartholomew, P.W.
Koné, N'G.
Ly, R.
Nantoume, H.
Traoré, B.
author_facet Bartholomew, P.W.
Traoré, B.
Nantoume, H.
Koné, N'G.
Ly, R.
author_sort Bartholomew, P.W.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The effects on intake of water availability and urea addition to rations based on molassed natural pasture hay and dry cowpea haulm were measured using 6 mature castrated male Zebu cattle of 343 kg mean iveweight, in an experiment carried out during the dry season in the semi-arid zone of central Mali. The trial was executed and analysed in in which each animal was subject to each of 6 treatments, successively over 6 feeding periods, each of 10 days' duration, throughout which the animals were tied in stalls under shade and fed and watered individually. Natural pasture hay comprising predominantly Pennisetum pedicellatum was fed ad libitum in mixture with 40 percent molasses, with and without addition of urea. Cowpea haulm was fed as a supplement to both diets. Feeding treatments were combined factorially with levels of water allowance. The limited impact of water restriction on feed intake suggests that shortage of drinking water may have a smaller effect on productivity of housed livestock than has been feared, and is an effect which may be compensated for, in the short-term at least by an increase in diet quality.
format Journal Article
id CGSpace29764
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 1996
publishDateRange 1996
publishDateSort 1996
publisher Springer
publisherStr Springer
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace297642024-04-25T06:01:38Z Effects of supplementation of molassed natural pasture hay with urea, and of water intake restriction on feed intakes by Zebu cattle in the semi-arid zone of Mali Bartholomew, P.W. Traoré, B. Nantoume, H. Koné, N'G. Ly, R. zebu cattle semiarid zones pastures supplementary feeding hay urea molasses The effects on intake of water availability and urea addition to rations based on molassed natural pasture hay and dry cowpea haulm were measured using 6 mature castrated male Zebu cattle of 343 kg mean iveweight, in an experiment carried out during the dry season in the semi-arid zone of central Mali. The trial was executed and analysed in in which each animal was subject to each of 6 treatments, successively over 6 feeding periods, each of 10 days' duration, throughout which the animals were tied in stalls under shade and fed and watered individually. Natural pasture hay comprising predominantly Pennisetum pedicellatum was fed ad libitum in mixture with 40 percent molasses, with and without addition of urea. Cowpea haulm was fed as a supplement to both diets. Feeding treatments were combined factorially with levels of water allowance. The limited impact of water restriction on feed intake suggests that shortage of drinking water may have a smaller effect on productivity of housed livestock than has been feared, and is an effect which may be compensated for, in the short-term at least by an increase in diet quality. 1996-06 2013-06-11T09:24:48Z 2013-06-11T09:24:48Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/29764 en Limited Access Springer Tropical Animal Health and Production;28(2): 191-192
spellingShingle zebu cattle
semiarid zones
pastures
supplementary feeding
hay
urea
molasses
Bartholomew, P.W.
Traoré, B.
Nantoume, H.
Koné, N'G.
Ly, R.
Effects of supplementation of molassed natural pasture hay with urea, and of water intake restriction on feed intakes by Zebu cattle in the semi-arid zone of Mali
title Effects of supplementation of molassed natural pasture hay with urea, and of water intake restriction on feed intakes by Zebu cattle in the semi-arid zone of Mali
title_full Effects of supplementation of molassed natural pasture hay with urea, and of water intake restriction on feed intakes by Zebu cattle in the semi-arid zone of Mali
title_fullStr Effects of supplementation of molassed natural pasture hay with urea, and of water intake restriction on feed intakes by Zebu cattle in the semi-arid zone of Mali
title_full_unstemmed Effects of supplementation of molassed natural pasture hay with urea, and of water intake restriction on feed intakes by Zebu cattle in the semi-arid zone of Mali
title_short Effects of supplementation of molassed natural pasture hay with urea, and of water intake restriction on feed intakes by Zebu cattle in the semi-arid zone of Mali
title_sort effects of supplementation of molassed natural pasture hay with urea and of water intake restriction on feed intakes by zebu cattle in the semi arid zone of mali
topic zebu cattle
semiarid zones
pastures
supplementary feeding
hay
urea
molasses
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/29764
work_keys_str_mv AT bartholomewpw effectsofsupplementationofmolassednaturalpasturehaywithureaandofwaterintakerestrictiononfeedintakesbyzebucattleinthesemiaridzoneofmali
AT traoreb effectsofsupplementationofmolassednaturalpasturehaywithureaandofwaterintakerestrictiononfeedintakesbyzebucattleinthesemiaridzoneofmali
AT nantoumeh effectsofsupplementationofmolassednaturalpasturehaywithureaandofwaterintakerestrictiononfeedintakesbyzebucattleinthesemiaridzoneofmali
AT koneng effectsofsupplementationofmolassednaturalpasturehaywithureaandofwaterintakerestrictiononfeedintakesbyzebucattleinthesemiaridzoneofmali
AT lyr effectsofsupplementationofmolassednaturalpasturehaywithureaandofwaterintakerestrictiononfeedintakesbyzebucattleinthesemiaridzoneofmali