Journal of Dairy Science (Jul 2024)

Reducing dietary crude protein: Effects on digestibility, nitrogen balance, and blood metabolites in late-lactation Holstein cows

  • M.G. Erickson,
  • T. Barros,
  • M.J. Aguerre,
  • J.J. Olmos Colmenero,
  • S.J. Bertics,
  • M.A. Wattiaux

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 107, no. 7
pp. 4394 – 4408

Abstract

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ABSTRACT: Our objectives were to determine the effects of reducing dietary CP concentration on nutrient digestibility, rumen function, N balance, and serum AA concentration for dairy cows in late lactation. At the initiation of the experimental period, we stratified Holstein cows (n = 128; mean ± SD 224 ± 54 DIM) by parity and days pregnant (86 ± 25 d) and assigned them to 1 of 16 pens. For 3 wk, all cows received a covariate diet containing 16.9% CP (DM basis). For the subsequent 12 wk, we assigned pens to 1 of 4 treatments containing 16.2%, 14.4%, 13.4%, or 11.9% CP (DM basis) in a randomized complete block design. Diets were fed as a TMR once daily. To reduce dietary CP, we replaced soybean meal with soybean hulls in the concentrate mix (DM basis). Diet evaluations suggested that several EAA, especially His, limited productivity as dietary CP declined. Digestibility of DM and CP decreased linearly with dietary CP reduction. Digestibility of NDF and potentially digestible NDF tended to respond in a quadratic pattern with the greatest digestibility at intermediate treatments. The reduction in dietary CP did not affect ruminal pH, but ruminal ammonia-N and branched-chain VFA concentrations declined linearly. The concentration of milk urea-N and plasma urea-N, secretion of milk N, and excretions of fecal N, urinary N, urinary urea-N, and unaccounted N decreased linearly with the reduction in dietary CP concentration. Urinary N expressed as a percentage of N intake was unaffected by dietary CP. Serum concentrations of total essential AA and NEAA were unaffected by dietary CP concentration. However, the ratio of essential to NEAA decreased with decreasing dietary CP. Serum 3-methylhistidine concentration increased linearly with decreasing dietary CP concentration, indicating greater skeletal muscle breakdown. Although our trial confirmed that reducing dietary CP decreased absolute excretion of urinary N, diet evaluations suggested that milk protein production decreased as certain essential AA became increasingly limited. Thus, reduced-CP diets have the potential to lessen reactive-N outputs of late-lactation cows, but more research is needed to design diets that minimize deleterious effects on productivity.

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