Chris Glassey, Roshean Woods, Charlotte Reed, Nauvoo Puriri, Gavin Scott, Alison Hodgkinson, Racheal Bryant
{"title":"Grazing management practices on Waikato and Canterbury dairy farms diverging in bulk milk urea content","authors":"Chris Glassey, Roshean Woods, Charlotte Reed, Nauvoo Puriri, Gavin Scott, Alison Hodgkinson, Racheal Bryant","doi":"10.33584/jnzg.2023.85.3649","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"New Zealand dairy farmers have little realtime information on surplus nitrogen (N) in their herd’s diet to help manage farm-scale N loss. By understanding the influence of management on bulk milk urea (BMU), farmers could potentially use milk components to identify changes in dietary N surplus. Our study examined the relationships between grazing management and BMU concentration on 38 dairy farms selected for low or high BMU in Canterbury and Waikato. Measurements included pre- and post-grazing herbage mass, perennial ryegrass leaf stage at grazing, and botanical and chemical composition (crude protein (CP) and metabolisable energy (ME) content) of herbage on four occasions over a year. Herds with Low BMU tended to graze pastures with a greater pre-grazing herbage mass (+153 kg DM/ha), a more advanced leaf stage (+0.13 number of leaves), and longer grazing intervals (+11 days). Consistent with this, herbage on Low BMU farms had lower CP (-2.7%) compared with High BMU farms. We identified grazing management differences between Low and High BMU groups, which could be linked to reductions in N surplus in the herd’s diet through the lower CP% of pasture offered. Future work should determine the importance of this in relation to other farm management factors such assupplement and N fertiliser use.","PeriodicalId":36573,"journal":{"name":"Journal of New Zealand Grasslands","volume":" 602","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-11-10","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of New Zealand Grasslands","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.33584/jnzg.2023.85.3649","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"Environmental Science","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
New Zealand dairy farmers have little realtime information on surplus nitrogen (N) in their herd’s diet to help manage farm-scale N loss. By understanding the influence of management on bulk milk urea (BMU), farmers could potentially use milk components to identify changes in dietary N surplus. Our study examined the relationships between grazing management and BMU concentration on 38 dairy farms selected for low or high BMU in Canterbury and Waikato. Measurements included pre- and post-grazing herbage mass, perennial ryegrass leaf stage at grazing, and botanical and chemical composition (crude protein (CP) and metabolisable energy (ME) content) of herbage on four occasions over a year. Herds with Low BMU tended to graze pastures with a greater pre-grazing herbage mass (+153 kg DM/ha), a more advanced leaf stage (+0.13 number of leaves), and longer grazing intervals (+11 days). Consistent with this, herbage on Low BMU farms had lower CP (-2.7%) compared with High BMU farms. We identified grazing management differences between Low and High BMU groups, which could be linked to reductions in N surplus in the herd’s diet through the lower CP% of pasture offered. Future work should determine the importance of this in relation to other farm management factors such assupplement and N fertiliser use.
新西兰奶农几乎没有关于其牛群饮食中剩余氮(N)的实时信息,以帮助管理农场规模的氮损失。通过了解管理对散装乳尿素(BMU)的影响,农民有可能利用乳成分来确定饲粮氮过剩的变化。本研究考察了在坎特伯雷和怀卡托选定的38个低或高BMU的奶牛场放牧管理与BMU浓度的关系。测定牧草在放牧前后的质量、多年生黑麦草在放牧期间的叶期、牧草的植物和化学成分(粗蛋白质(CP)和代谢能(ME)含量)。低BMU的牧群放牧前牧草量大(+153 kg DM/ha)、叶期早(+0.13叶数)、放牧间隔长(+11 d)。与此一致的是,低BMU农场的牧草CP低于高BMU农场(-2.7%)。我们确定了低和高BMU组之间放牧管理的差异,这可能与通过提供较低CP%的牧草减少牧群日粮中的N剩余有关。未来的工作应该确定这与其他农场管理因素(如补充和氮肥使用)的重要性。