Energy supplementation and herbage allowance effects on daily intake in lactating mares.
Abstract: Little is known about how to manage grazing horses, including the thresholds under which energy supplementation is required. Here we investigated the effects of daily herbage allowance (DHA) and energy supplementation (ES) on daily herbage intake in lactating mares of light breeds grazing high-quality regrowth during summer. Three contrasting DHA, low (LOW), medium (MED), and high (HIGH), that is, 35.0, 52.5, and 70.0 g DM∙kg BW(-1)∙d(-1), respectively, were obtained by adjusting pasture strip width. Eighteen Anglo-Arab and French Saddle lactating mares were either supplemented with 2.6 kg DM barley/d (SUP group; n= 9) or left nonsupplemented (NSUP group; n = 9) throughout the experiment. For 3 successive 2-wk periods, 3 groups of SUP mares (n = 3) and 3 groups of NSUP mares (n = 3) grazed each DHA according to a 3 × 3 Latin square design. Pregrazing sward surface height (SSH) was similar between treatments (26.6 cm), but postgrazing SSH differed significantly between each DHA (2.9, 4.4, and 5.7 cm for LOW, MED, and HIGH, respectively; P < 0.001). Herbage DMI (HDMI) increased linearly from 18.5 to 23.4 g DM∙kg BW(-1)∙d(-1) with increasing DHA (i.e., 0.13 kg DM eaten/kg DM of herbage offered; P < 0.001) independently of ES and with no significant ES × DHA interaction. This increase in HDMI resulted from an increase in grazing time between LOW (961 min/d) and MED and HIGH (1,021 min/d; P < 0.01) and from an increase in intake rate between LOW and MED (11.8 g DM/min) and HIGH (13.6 g DM/min; P < 0.01). Total digestible DMI (TDDMI) and NE intake (NEI) increased linearly from 12.3 to 15.2 g DM∙kg BW∙(-1)d(-1) and from 136.6 to 165.8 kJ∙kg BW(-1)∙d (-1)with increasing DHA (P < 0.001), respectively. Total digestible DMI and NEI were significantly lower for NSUP than for SUP mares: 12.5 vs. 14.9 g DM∙kg BW(-1)∙d(-1) (P < 0.01) and 134.6 vs. 166.5 kJ∙kg BW(-1)∙d(-1) (P < 0.001), respectively. Whereas SUP mares always met their energy requirements, NSUP mares no longer met theirs when DHA fell below 66 g DM∙kg BW(-1)∙d(-1) (i.e., 39 kg DM∙mare(-1)∙d(-1)).
Publication Date: 2015-05-29 PubMed ID: 26020347DOI: 10.2527/jas.2014-8447Google Scholar: Lookup
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- Comparative Study
- Journal Article
- Research Support
- Non-U.S. Gov't
Summary
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This research investigates how daily herbage allowance and energy supplementation affects daily intake in lacting mares. The study depicts that with increasing daily herbage allowance and introducing energy supplementation, the total digestible dry matter intake (TDDMI) and energy intake (NEI) improved substantially in the mares.
Study Design and Experiment
- The experiment was divided into three sections based on Daily Herbage Allowance (DHA) factors Low (LOW), Medium (MED) and High (HIGH), adjusting the pasture strip width accordingly.
- The subjects of the study were 18 lactating mares, 9 of these were supplemented with 2.6 kg dry matter barley/day (SUP group), and 9 were left without supplementation (NSUP group).
- Using these groups, the mares grazed with each DHA level in three 2-week periods, using the 3 X 3 Latin square design for testing different levels of treatment.
- Pregrazing sward surface height (SSH) was kept consistent between all groups, but post-grazing SSH varied depending upon the level of DHA.
Findings
- Herbage Dry Matter Intake (HDMI) linearly increased between 18.5 to 23.4 g dry matter/kg body weight/day with predictably higher DHA, regardless of the energy supplementation.
- The increase in HDMI was a result of increased grazing time in higher DHAs and a rise in intake rate.
- Total Digestible Dry Matter Intake (TDDMI) and Net Energy Intake (NEI) also followed the same pattern of increase as the DHA increased.
- Mares that were not given energy supplementation failed to meet their energy requirements when the DHA fell below 66 g dry matter/kg body weight/day. Whereas, the mares in the SUP group always met their energy requirements, regardless of how much DHA was available.
Conclusions
- This study illustrates the impacts of DHA and energy supplementation on the daily intake of lactating mares.
- These findings encourage the practical management of grazing horses by adjusting DHA and providing necessary energy supplements to ensure the horses’ energy requirements are always met.
Cite This Article
APA
Collas C, Dumont B, Delagarde R, Martin-Rosset W, Fleurance G.
(2015).
Energy supplementation and herbage allowance effects on daily intake in lactating mares.
J Anim Sci, 93(5), 2520-2529.
https://doi.org/10.2527/jas.2014-8447 Publication
Researcher Affiliations
MeSH Terms
- Animal Feed
- Animal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena / physiology
- Animals
- Body Weight / physiology
- Dietary Supplements
- Eating / physiology
- Energy Metabolism / physiology
- Feeding Behavior / physiology
- Female
- Herbivory / physiology
- Horses / physiology
- Lactation / physiology
- Nutritional Requirements / physiology
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