降雨对不同气候带肉牛生长的影响。

IF 4 2区 农林科学 Q1 AGRICULTURE, DAIRY & ANIMAL SCIENCE
F M Hasan, S Lomax, P C Thomson, M R Islam, A Chlingaryan, C E F Clark
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引用次数: 0

摘要

遗传、畜牧业和饲养基础都会影响牛的生长。澳大利亚的牛群饲养基地占澳大利亚大陆面积的 40%,气候和地貌各不相同,因此决定牛群饲养量极具挑战性。在导致气候变化的各种因素中,降雨量是决定饲养基地增长的主要因素,也是决定牛群增长的主要因素。因此,了解降雨量与牛群生长在澳大利亚多样地貌中的相互作用,对于帮助牧场主做出决策至关重要。然而,由于缺乏足够的时空牛只生长数据,要揭示景观与降雨量之间的相互作用以促进牛只生长,迄今为止还不可行。Optiweigh(OW)系统已在澳大利亚广泛的牛肉生产系统中部署,作为一种自愿称重装置,适时监测牛的活重(LW)。这项研究确定了降雨量对澳大利亚三个农业气候区(草原区、亚热带区和温带区)肉牛生长时空变异性的影响,旨在通过活重变异模式描述多样化的饲养基础。在两年(2020-2022 年)的时间里,从 82 026 头牛身上共收集了 130 万个牛生长量观测数据。此外,还整理了澳大利亚气象局提供的距离每个 OW 单位最近的气象站的降雨量数据。牛的平均日增重(ADG)按季节和区域进行了分组。使用一系列线性混合模型来研究每个区域-季节组合的 ADG,其中动物个体和农场为随机效应,气候区、当前和滞后降雨量为固定效应。数据集的总体平均日增重为 0.68 千克/天,区内农场之间的生长变异性(SD:0.349 ± 0.021 千克/天,估计值 ± SE)大于农场内牛之间的生长变异性(SD:0.229 ± 0.004 千克/天)。ADG的变化可部分归因于降雨的时间和降雨量,农业气候区降雨与ADG之间存在独特的相互作用。草原区和温带地区存在季节性滞后降雨效应,而温带地区的降雨对牛的生长有全年的影响。此外,季节性滞后降雨量对平均日增重的影响不一,而降雨量出现在一个季节时会降低同一季节各区牛的生长(P
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The impact of rainfall on beef cattle growth across diverse climate zones.

Genetics, animal husbandry, and the feedbase all impact cattle growth. Australia's cattle feedbase covers 40% of the continent and encompasses diverse climates and landscapes, making stocking rate decisions challenging. Of the factors contributing to climate change, rainfall is a primary determinant of feedbase growth and, with this, cattle growth. Understanding the interplay between rainfall and cattle growth across the diverse Australian landscape is thus critical to aid farmer decision-making. However, revealing such interactions between landscape and rainfall for cattle growth for such decision-making has until now been infeasible due to a lack of sufficient temporal and spatial cattle growth data. The Optiweigh (OW) system has been deployed across Australia's extensive beef production systems as a voluntary weighing unit, opportunistically monitoring cattle liveweight (LW). This study determined the impact of rainfall on the temporal and spatial variability of beef cattle growth across three of Australia's agro-climatic zones (grassland, subtropical, and temperate), aiming to describe the diverse feedbase through patterns of LW variability. A total of 1.3 million cattle LW observations were collected from 82 026 cattle over 2 years (2020-2022). Rainfall data from the Australian Bureau of Meteorology were also collated for the closest meteorological station to each OW unit. Cattle LW average daily gain (ADG) was clustered by season and zone. A series of linear mixed models were used to examine ADG for each zone-season combination, with random effects for individual animals and farms, and fixed effects for climate zone and current and lagged rainfall. The overall mean ADG for the dataset was 0.68 kg/day, with greater growth variability between farms within a zone (SD: 0.349 ± 0.021 kg/day, estimate ± SE) than between cattle within a farm (SD: 0.229 ± 0.004 kg/day). This ADG variability can be partly attributed to the timing and amount of rainfall, with agro-climatic zones showing unique interactions between rainfall and ADG. Seasonal lagged rainfall effects were present in the grassland and temperate zones, while rainfall in the temperate zone had a year-round effect on cattle growth. Furthermore, season-wise lagged rainfall had mixed effects on ADG, whereas rainfall occurring in a season reduced growth in the same season across zones (P < 0.001). These findings provide valuable initial insights into the variability of ADG across the landscape over time and markedly improve our understanding of the interplay between climate and Australia's diverse feedbase, contributing to improved management strategies.

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来源期刊
Animal
Animal 农林科学-奶制品与动物科学
CiteScore
7.50
自引率
2.80%
发文量
246
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: Editorial board animal attracts the best research in animal biology and animal systems from across the spectrum of the agricultural, biomedical, and environmental sciences. It is the central element in an exciting collaboration between the British Society of Animal Science (BSAS), Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA) and the European Federation of Animal Science (EAAP) and represents a merging of three scientific journals: Animal Science; Animal Research; Reproduction, Nutrition, Development. animal publishes original cutting-edge research, ''hot'' topics and horizon-scanning reviews on animal-related aspects of the life sciences at the molecular, cellular, organ, whole animal and production system levels. The main subject areas include: breeding and genetics; nutrition; physiology and functional biology of systems; behaviour, health and welfare; farming systems, environmental impact and climate change; product quality, human health and well-being. Animal models and papers dealing with the integration of research between these topics and their impact on the environment and people are particularly welcome.
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