Utilization of fungal treated wheat straw in the diet of late lactating cow

Eight primiparous Holstein cows, in late lactation (255±10 days in milk) and yielding 10.3±1.3 kg/d of 4% fat corrected milk (FCM) were allocated into two groups randomly. Two diets containing 30% wheat straw either untreated (UWS) or treated with Pleurotus ostreatus (FTWS) were offered as total mix...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Fazaeli, Hassan, Mahmoudzadeh, Homayoun, Mohd Jelan, Zainal Aznam, Rouzbehan, Yousef, Liang, Juan Boo, Azizi, Aslan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Asian-Australasian Association of Animal Production Societies 2004
Online Access:http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/50075/1/Utilization%20of%20fungal%20treated%20wheat%20straw%20in%20the%20diet%20of%20late%20lactating%20cow.pdf
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/50075/
http://www.ajas.info/journal/view.php?number=20702
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Institution: Universiti Putra Malaysia
Language: English
id my.upm.eprints.50075
record_format eprints
spelling my.upm.eprints.500752016-12-30T06:06:40Z http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/50075/ Utilization of fungal treated wheat straw in the diet of late lactating cow Fazaeli, Hassan Mahmoudzadeh, Homayoun Mohd Jelan, Zainal Aznam Rouzbehan, Yousef Liang, Juan Boo Azizi, Aslan Eight primiparous Holstein cows, in late lactation (255±10 days in milk) and yielding 10.3±1.3 kg/d of 4% fat corrected milk (FCM) were allocated into two groups randomly. Two diets containing 30% wheat straw either untreated (UWS) or treated with Pleurotus ostreatus (FTWS) were offered as total mixed ration (TMR). In vivo digestibility of the diets was determined, using acid insoluble ash as a marker. Daily milk production was recorded and milk samples were collected and analysed. Diet FTWS resulted in significantly (p<0.05) higher dry matter intake (DMI) (12.2±0.86 vs. 10.6±1.3), DM digestibility (58.8 vs. 52.3) and milk yield (9 vs. 7.5 kg). Milk fat contents were 34.2 and 35.6 g/liter that did not differ between cows fed treated or untreated straw. However, the concentrations of lactose, solid non fat, total solids and milk protein for diets UWS and FTWS were 57.3 and 54.9, 98.9 and 93.2, 134.5 and 127.4, 35.7 and 32.3 g/l, respectively, which differed significantly (p<0.05). The average body weights gain (BWG) for UWS and FTWS were 272 and 743 g/d, respectively (p<0.05). The FCM yield per kg of DMI was similar (0.68 and 0.67 liter) for the two groups, but BWG/kgDMI was higher in the FTWS diet. Asian-Australasian Association of Animal Production Societies 2004 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/50075/1/Utilization%20of%20fungal%20treated%20wheat%20straw%20in%20the%20diet%20of%20late%20lactating%20cow.pdf Fazaeli, Hassan and Mahmoudzadeh, Homayoun and Mohd Jelan, Zainal Aznam and Rouzbehan, Yousef and Liang, Juan Boo and Azizi, Aslan (2004) Utilization of fungal treated wheat straw in the diet of late lactating cow. Asian-Australasian Journal of Animal Sciences, 17 (4). pp. 467-472. ISSN 1011-2367; ESSN: 1976-5517 http://www.ajas.info/journal/view.php?number=20702 10.5713/ajas.2004.467
institution Universiti Putra Malaysia
building UPM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Putra Malaysia
content_source UPM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://psasir.upm.edu.my/
language English
description Eight primiparous Holstein cows, in late lactation (255±10 days in milk) and yielding 10.3±1.3 kg/d of 4% fat corrected milk (FCM) were allocated into two groups randomly. Two diets containing 30% wheat straw either untreated (UWS) or treated with Pleurotus ostreatus (FTWS) were offered as total mixed ration (TMR). In vivo digestibility of the diets was determined, using acid insoluble ash as a marker. Daily milk production was recorded and milk samples were collected and analysed. Diet FTWS resulted in significantly (p<0.05) higher dry matter intake (DMI) (12.2±0.86 vs. 10.6±1.3), DM digestibility (58.8 vs. 52.3) and milk yield (9 vs. 7.5 kg). Milk fat contents were 34.2 and 35.6 g/liter that did not differ between cows fed treated or untreated straw. However, the concentrations of lactose, solid non fat, total solids and milk protein for diets UWS and FTWS were 57.3 and 54.9, 98.9 and 93.2, 134.5 and 127.4, 35.7 and 32.3 g/l, respectively, which differed significantly (p<0.05). The average body weights gain (BWG) for UWS and FTWS were 272 and 743 g/d, respectively (p<0.05). The FCM yield per kg of DMI was similar (0.68 and 0.67 liter) for the two groups, but BWG/kgDMI was higher in the FTWS diet.
format Article
author Fazaeli, Hassan
Mahmoudzadeh, Homayoun
Mohd Jelan, Zainal Aznam
Rouzbehan, Yousef
Liang, Juan Boo
Azizi, Aslan
spellingShingle Fazaeli, Hassan
Mahmoudzadeh, Homayoun
Mohd Jelan, Zainal Aznam
Rouzbehan, Yousef
Liang, Juan Boo
Azizi, Aslan
Utilization of fungal treated wheat straw in the diet of late lactating cow
author_facet Fazaeli, Hassan
Mahmoudzadeh, Homayoun
Mohd Jelan, Zainal Aznam
Rouzbehan, Yousef
Liang, Juan Boo
Azizi, Aslan
author_sort Fazaeli, Hassan
title Utilization of fungal treated wheat straw in the diet of late lactating cow
title_short Utilization of fungal treated wheat straw in the diet of late lactating cow
title_full Utilization of fungal treated wheat straw in the diet of late lactating cow
title_fullStr Utilization of fungal treated wheat straw in the diet of late lactating cow
title_full_unstemmed Utilization of fungal treated wheat straw in the diet of late lactating cow
title_sort utilization of fungal treated wheat straw in the diet of late lactating cow
publisher Asian-Australasian Association of Animal Production Societies
publishDate 2004
url http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/50075/1/Utilization%20of%20fungal%20treated%20wheat%20straw%20in%20the%20diet%20of%20late%20lactating%20cow.pdf
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/50075/
http://www.ajas.info/journal/view.php?number=20702
_version_ 1643834555661025280