The Magical, Mystical Rumen
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Transcript The Magical, Mystical Rumen
The Magical, Mystical
Rumen
Dr. L. E. Chase
Dept. of Animal Science
Cornell University
Objectives of Feeding
Dairy Cattle
Balanced Total Ration and
Good Feed Management
Maximize dry matter intakes
Optimize milk production
Good health and reproduction
PROFITABILITY!!
Growth
Dairy Cattle Nutrition
What are we feeding?
A dairy cow?
Rumen bugs?
Bug Managers
Don’t think of it as feeding the cow,
you are feeding the bacteria or “bugs”
that live in the cow’s rumen.
The bugs in the rumen take the nutrients in
the feed and turn it into milk, milk fat & protein,
growth, and to nourish their growing calf.
The Rumen Environment
Anaerobic
Constant temperature = 39 C
pH = 6 to 6.6
Buffered by saliva
10-15 % dry matter
Constant mixing = motility
Generalized equation for ruminal
fermentation and metabolism
Carbohydrates +
Rumen bugs +
Fiber fermentors
Starch + sugar fermentors
Nitrogen sources +
Ammonia, peptides, and AA
Anaerobic environment +
Good environment to grow
(pH, water, temperature)
Volatile Fatty Acids +
Acetate, propionate,
butryate
=
More rumen bugs +
Microbial protein
Methane (CH4) +
CO2 +
H2O +
Heat
Rumen Bacteria
109 - 1011 per gram
0.3 - 50 um in size
60-65% CP
80% of CP is true protein
Fiber digesting bacteria
Convert fiber to VFA’s (mainly acetate)
- Cellulose, hemicellulose
Like a higher rumen pH (>6)
Require ammonia as a nitrogen source
Slow generation interval
- 8 – 10 hours to double
Sugar % Starch Digesting
Bacteria
Convert sugars and starches to VFA’s
- mainly propionate
Like a lower rumen pH (5.5 to 6)
Rapid generation interval
- Can double in < 1 hour
Use ammonia, amino acids or peptides as
nitrogen sources
Rumen protozoa
105 - 106 per gram
20 - 200 um in size
May account for 50% of the total rumen
microbial mass
Not well understood
Cows & Rumens - A
Symbiotic Relationship
Stage 1 - The cow provides housing &
nutrients for microbial growth
Stage 2 - The host animal utilizes the
rumen microorganisms passing to the
intestines as a source of nutrients
What Does the Cow
Provide?
Low oxygen environment
Constant temperature (99 - 106 0 F)
Food for the bugs
Neutral environment
Garbage removal
What Do the Bugs Provide?
Fiber digestion
High quality protein
VFA’s for energy and building blocks for
milk synthesis
Synthesis of B vitamins
Amino acid balancing
% of Protein Requirement
from Microbial Protein
100
80
g N/g OM
60
20
40
30
20
40
0
55
77
Milk, lbs/day
99
Rumen CHO/Protein
Balance
Good amino acid management begins
with good CHO management in order to
produce a high & consistent amount of AA
from microbes
Hoover
What’s the Economics of
Microbial Protein?
Corn sil. – DM
Alf. Hay
Oat sil.
Wet brewers
Cracked corn
Ground corn
Ration A
16.2
2.2
3.5
4.8
9.5
Ration B
20
2.7
5
5
10.9
Economics of Microbial
Protein
SBM – 48
HT SBM
Soy Hulls
Anim. Prot.
Bypass Fat
Ration A
8
6
.5
.75
Ration B
7.5
0.5
Economics of Microbial
Protein
Milk, lbs/day
MP – bact., g
MP –RUP., g
Feed cost, $
IOFC, $
97
1369
1694
4.05
9.33
100
1582
1591
3.52
10.73
Microbial Composition
4.4%
12.0%
21.1%
62.5%
Protein
CHO
Fat
Ash
Urine
Liver
Milk
Recycled
Feed
Crude Protein
Urea
Recycled
Ammonia
Carbohydrates
VFA
Manure
Excess
Protein
Microbes
Escape
Feed
Protein
Dr. M. B. Hall - Univ. of Florida
Rume
n
Absorbed
Protein
Production
&
Maintenance
Ration, Eating Rate &
Saliva Production
Feed
Pellets
Eating,
Saliva,
lb/minute teaspoons/lb
0.79
1.0
Fresh grass
0.62
1.5
Silage
0.55
2.0
Dried grass
0.18
5.0
Hay
0.15
6.0
Forage Particle Size and
Chewing - Corn Silage
30
25
20
min/lb.
NDF
15
10
5
0
3/4 inch
1/2 inch
1/4 inch
Particle Size - Case Study
900 cow dairy
Things going well
Then a large number of fresh cow DA’s
within 1-2 weeks
Feed company was called by the producer
and asked what was wrong with the
ration
Corn Silage Particle Size
60
50
40
Bunker
% 30
Tower
20
10
0
Top
Middle
Pan
“To Feed the Cow, You Need
to First Feed the Bugs”
“Happy” Bugs = Milk, Health
and Profit
The Manure is Your Mirror
What To Look For:
1. Corn Kernels
2. Grain
3. Long Pieces
of Fiber
4. Consistency shaving cream
The Big Balancing Act...
Environment
Effective
fiber
Rumen
Fermentable
Carbohydrates
Salivary buffers
Ruminal mixing
Acid production
Stall comfort
standing vs lying
Heat stress
Over-crowding
Diet consistency
Dr. W. Stone - Cornell University
Conclusion
Need a balanced ration of
carbohydrates, protein, vitamins,
minerals, fiber & effective fiber for
optimal rumen function, microbial
growth=maximum VFA production
Milk yields
Good health
Milk components