Livestock Research for Rural Development 13 (1) 2001 | Citation of this paper |
E-mail: jcombell@telcel.net.ve
Restricted
suckling before and after milking is used in most dual purpose cattle systems of Latin
America, but many strategies exist that can alter milk fat and yield. An experiment was
carried out to evaluate the influence of stimulation with calf suckling before milking on
milk fat, yield of saleable and consumed milk and liveweight gain of calves in dual
purpose systems with restricted suckling. Brahman x Holstein cows (n = 24) of 2 or more
parities were used. They were machine milked twice daily. Their calves suckled their dams
for 30 minutes after the morning milking. They received chopped forage ad libitum and up to 1 kg/day of concentrate
before weaning, which occurred at 90 kg liveweight. A
completely randomized design was used to compare three treatments: W, without suckling before milking; AM, suckling
before milking in the morning; and AM+PM, suckling both before morning and afternoon
milking.
In treatments W, AM and AM+PM, saleable milk yields before weaning were 7.0, 8.9 and 8.1 kg/day; the quantities of milk consumed by the calves were 2.9, 2.5 and 1.7 kg/day; and total milk yields were 9.8, 11.4 and 9.9 kg/day. Milk fat was 6.0, 7.4 and 7.0 % in the milk consumed by the calves, and 2.1, 2.4 and 2.6 % in saleable milk. The liveweight gains of the calves in the same treatments were 0.54, 0.50 and 0.47 kg/day.
These
results show that restricted suckling before milking to stimulate let-down
increases saleable milk yield and its fat content without affecting calf growth rate,
provided a feed supplement is given.
Restricted
suckling before and after milking is used in most dual purpose cattle systems of Latin
America, partly as a consequence of difficulties in milking cows with Bos indicus
genes without the presence of the calf. It consists in allowing the calf to be suckled by
its dam for a few minutes before milking, and for a longer period after milking (from 15
minutes to 1 hour). Many studies have been
carried out to compare it with the artificial rearing used with European dairy cows (see Ryle and Ørskov 1992; Preston et al 1995;
Sandoval-Castro et al 1999).
It is well documented that restricted suckling increases total milk yield, but that
saleable milk fat decreases, frequently to levels undesired by the processing industry.
Within the definition of restricted suckling a variety of strategies are
available that can affect the amount of milk consumed by the calf, the amount of saleable
milk and its fat content, and a balance between them must be achieved to satisfy the
interests of the farmer and those of the processing industry. These strategies consist of
variations in the length of the period of lactation with suckling, the number of times per
day that suckling and milking is carried out, the degree of stimulation by suckling before
milking, saving the milk of one teat for the calf and others. But in contrast with
research to compare restricted suckling with artificial rearing, almost no information is
available on the cow-calf relationship and its effect on milk composition.
Suckling for
a short period (1-2 minutes only) before milking, to stimulate milk let-down, is a common
practice in many farms, but the presence of calves during milking may complicate
management, specially when machine milking is used. An alternative used in some farms is
only to allow suckling after milking.
The objective
of this study was to evaluate the influence of stimulation of let-down by restricted
suckling before milking on consumed and saleable milk, on milk fat percentage, and on live
weight gain and solid food consumption of the calves.
A completely
randomized design was used to compare three treatments:
The
experiment was carried out in Maracay, Venezuela, with 24 Brahman X Holstein cows of two
or more parities and a proportion of 5/8 to 3/4 Holstein. The
cows grazed on Cynodon nlemfuensis, Brachiaria mutica and Digitaria
swazilandensis all day, except during machine milking that started at 06:30 and 16:00
h. They received 2.5 kg/day of concentrate at each milking, prepared on the farm with 48 %
extracted maize germ, 48 % wheat middling, 2 % salt and 2 % mineral mixture.
The calves were housed in partially roofed individual pens (2 x 6 m) with a concrete floor, where water, chopped forage and the concentrate described for the cows were offered ad libitum, except during the first three days after calving when they were kept with their dams. For the treatments with restricted suckling before milking, the calves were taken to the milking parlor, located some 30 m from their pens, and were allowed to suck all four teats for approximately 1 minute, until let-down was observed. Immediately afterwards, they were separated from their dams and returned to their pens, while milking continued. At the end of the morning milking, all cows were taken to the calf housing area and allowed to suckle their respective calves in their individual pens for approximately 30 minutes, after which they were returned to the field for grazing. After the afternoon milking, restricted suckling before milking was practiced only in the AM+PM treatment, after which all cows were returned to the field for grazing. The calves were weaned when they reached 90 kg liveweight.
The cows were
weighed weekly after calving and saleable milk was measured daily at each milking. A
weekly sample of morning and afternoon saleable milk was taken for fat analysis, from a
bucket where all milk from the machine milking bottle was transferred and thoroughly
mixed. Milk consumed by the calves was estimated weekly, weighing them before and after
suckling. A milk sample was taken just after
suckling started. Fat content of saleable and consumed milk samples was determined by the
Babcock method (AOAC 1984). Intake of forage and concentrate by the calves was measured
once a week and samples were taken for later analysis for crude protein (AOAC 1984) and
neutral detergent fiber (Goering and Van Soest 1970).
The liveweight gain of the calves was estimated by linear regression of the weekly weights on time. Saleable, consumed and total milk yields were corrected by milk yield during the previous lactation and adjusted means were calculated. Means of variables analysed were compared with Duncans multiple range test (SAS 1996).
Total milk
yields before weaning were similar in the three treatments (Table 1), but the components
of total yield were influenced by restricted suckling before milking. Milk
consumption by the calves decreased (P<0.05) from 2.9 kg/day without restricted suckling before
milking to 1.7
kg/day when restricted
suckling before milking was applied
at the twice daily milking. The opposite occurred with saleable milk, which increased
(P<0.05) from 7.0 kg/day without restricted suckling before milking
(treatment W) to 8.9 and 8.1 kg/day in treatments AM and AM+PM.
The percentage of total milk consumed by the calf was appreciably reduced with restricted suckling
before milking and was
almost halved between treatments W and AM+PM (30 vs. 17 %). Liveweight losses of the cows
(from just after calving until week 14, when all cows were still suckling their offspring)
were very similar, varying between 19 and 21 kg (Table 1).
Table 1. Milk yield and fat
before weaning and live weight of cows without (W), or with suckling before milking at
morning milking (AM) and at morning and afternoon milking (AM+PM). |
||||
|
W |
AM |
AM+PM |
SEM/Prob |
Milk (kg/day) |
|
|
|
|
Consumed |
2.9a |
2.5a |
1.7b |
0.21/0.05 |
Saleable |
7.0b |
8.9a |
8.1a |
0.77/0.01 |
Morning |
5.5b |
6.8a |
6.2ab |
0.56/0.10 |
Afternoon |
1.5b |
2.2a |
2.0ab |
0.33/0.01 |
Total yield |
9.8 |
11.4 |
9.9 |
0.71 |
Milk consumed/total
yield |
0.30 |
0.22 |
0.17 |
|
Fat (%) |
|
|
|
|
Consumed milk |
6.0b |
7.4a |
7.0ab |
0.51/0.10 |
Saleable milk |
|
|
|
|
Morning |
2.1b |
2.4ab |
2.6a |
0.26/0.01 |
Afternoon |
2.6 |
2.7 |
3.1 |
0.18 |
Liveweight (kg) |
|
|
|
|
After calving |
474 |
463 |
445 |
17.1 |
At 14 weeks |
455 |
442 |
424 |
15.4 |
SEM Standard Error of means; Prob. Significance level;
ab Means in rows without letter in common are different at the indicated levels of
significance |
Milk fat
content was influenced by restricted suckling before milking. Fat in
consumed milk increased from 6.0 to 7.4 % between treatments W and AM (P<0.10) and the
same trend was observed in morning saleable milk, increasing from 2.1 to 2.6 % in
treatments W and AM+PM (P<0.10). Correcting milk yields to 4 % fat (FCM), appreciably
raised milk consumption values and reduced saleable milk, with consequent effect on the
components of total milk yield (Table 2), but the influence of treatments on these
components followed the same trend observed with milk uncorrected for fat content.
Liveweights of the calves at birth, at weaning and 30 days after weaning were similar for all treatments (Table 3). The time to reach weaning weight varied between 124 and 131 days. Intake of concentrate (21.9 % crude protein and 46.2 % NDF) and forage (6.8 % crude protein and 78.1 % NDF) from birth to weaning did not vary between treatments.
Table 2. Cow milk yields and milk intakes by
calves, corrected to 4 % fat (FCM), for treatments without (W) or with suckling before milking at morning milking (AM)
and at morning and afternoon milking (AM+PM). |
||||
FCM (kg/day) |
W |
AM |
AM+PM |
SEM/Prob. |
Consumed |
3.5a |
3.7a |
2.4b |
0.25/0.05 |
Saleable |
4.9b |
6.7a |
6.3ab |
0.77/0.10 |
Morning |
3.7b |
5.0a |
4.6ab |
0.55/0.10 |
Afternoon |
1.1b |
1.7a |
1.6ab |
0.28/0.10 |
Total |
8.4b |
10.4a |
8.7ab |
0.76/0.10 |
Consumed/total |
0.42 |
0.36 |
0.28 |
|
Table 3. Liveweights at
birth and weaning of the calves, liveweight gain, age at weaning and solid feed
consumption on treatments without (W) or with suckling before morning milking (AM) and at
morning and afternoon milking (AM+PM). |
||||
|
W |
AM |
AM+PM |
SEM/Prob |
Liveweight (kg) |
|
|
|
|
Birth |
30 |
32 |
33 |
2.1 |
Weaning |
91 |
91 |
91 |
0.5 |
Daily gain |
0.54 |
0.50 |
0.47 |
0.04 |
Days to weaning |
124 |
128 |
131 |
11.0 |
Intake, kg dry matter |
|
|
|
|
Concentrate |
17 |
16 |
20 |
2.8 |
Forage |
14 |
16 |
19 |
1.8 |
The main
effect of restricted suckling before milking was a change in the components of milk yield,
without major changes in the total quantity of milk. The proportion of saleable milk
increased, at the expense of milk consumed, and its fat content also increased (Table 1).
These results are of practical importance to the farmer, because more milk with a higher
content of fat is available for sale, without negative effects on calf growth rate. The
cause of the larger amounts of saleable milk induced by restricted suckling before milking
cannot be explained with the information available. Bar Peled et al (1995) observed higher
levels of blood oxytocin (OT) with suckling than with machine milking, when they were
alternated every four hours, and this resulted in larger amounts of milk suckled than
milked. Possibly larger OT peaks also occurred in the AM
and AM+PM treatments in this trial, resulting in a higher amount of alveolar milk
ejected and removed by the machine. But milk was not completely removed in any of the
treatments, because the amount of milk obtained by suckling
during the approximately one hour period following milking (1.7 to 2.9 kg) was
always larger than the estimated milk yield per hour drawn by the machine, which was
between 0.41 and 0.48 kg. Two factors, not evaluated here, could be related to the partial
milk removal during milking following suckling before milking: the absence of elevated OT
concentrations during the entire milking process (Bruckmaier and Blum 1996) and peripheral
inhibition of OT effects (Bruckmaier et al 1997).
The higher
fat content in consumed than in saleable milk has been reported by several authors (see
review by Sandoval et al 1995) and could be explained by an irregular distribution of fat
in the milk inside the udder, concentrated mainly at the top of the milk accumulated in
the cistern. The higher fat content of saleable milk in AM and AM+PM treatments could also
be related to the removal during milking of a proportion of the fatty milk that otherwise
would have remained in the udder and sucked later by the calf. It also explains the higher
fat concentrations in the smaller amount of suckled milk observed in these treatments,
because the fat content of suckled milk increases with time (Sandoval-Castro et al 1995).
Total milk
was not influenced by suckling before milking (Table 1), but a trend for yield to be
higher on treatment AM than in treatment W was observed after correcting it for fat (Table
2). Total milk yield was underestimated on treatments AM and AM+PM, because milk consumed
during suckling before milking was not measured. More recent information (M. Tesorero,
unpublished results), obtained from a treatment similar to AM+PM, has shown that the
quantities taken by the calf during suckling before milking reach values of 0.73±0.20 and
0.51±0.14 kg in morning and afternoon milking, respectively. These are significant amounts considering the
relatively low milk yields obtained in dual purpose systems. If it is assumed that similar
amounts were suckled before milking in this trial, total milk yields in treatments AM and
AM+PM increase from 11.4 and 9.9 kg/day (Table 1) to 12.1 and 11.1 kg/day. These amounts
would be 13 and 20% higher than the yield (9.8 kg/day) obtained without suckling before
milking. The implication is then that
suckling before milking also increases total milk yield.
The
proportion of the total FCM consumed by the calves (Table 2) reaches very high values if
suckling before milking (W) is not practiced. However, the growth rates of the calves on
the W treatment were no better than those that were suckled before milking (AM
and AM+PM) (Table 3). Lower milk consumption is usually accompanied by higher solid feed
intakes (Forbes 1995), but forage and concentrate intakes were similar in all treatments
on this trial. As mentioned before, milk consumed did not include the milk suckled before
milking and, even considering that it might have a significantly lower fat content than
other milk fractions, it could partially compensate the lower milk consumption observed
after milking in AM and AM+PM treatments and thus explain the absence of growth rate
differences compared with treatment W.
The findings
from this study have shown that stimulation of the udder by calf suckling before milking
in dual purpose systems with restricted suckling after milking:
Summing up,
suckling before milking is advantageous compared to just suckling after milking.
The authors
express their gratitude to CONICIT for the financial support (Project Nº S1-99000047) for
this study.
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Received 19 December 2000