Understanding Feeding Standards in Ruminant Nutrition

Slide Note
Embed
Share

Feeding standards play a crucial role in determining the nutritional needs of animals for optimal health and productivity. They consider factors like productivity, product composition, and physiological conditions, guiding effective nutritional management. Despite their usefulness, feeding standards have limitations, such as overlooking palatability and not accounting for economic aspects. Different feeding standard systems like TDN and DE have their merits and demerits, influencing the evaluation of energy content in feed.


Uploaded on Aug 13, 2024 | 0 Views


Download Presentation

Please find below an Image/Link to download the presentation.

The content on the website is provided AS IS for your information and personal use only. It may not be sold, licensed, or shared on other websites without obtaining consent from the author. Download presentation by click this link. If you encounter any issues during the download, it is possible that the publisher has removed the file from their server.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Feeding Standard- Comparative Appraisal and Limitations Course No. Course Name Unit : II : ANN 601 : Ruminant Nutrition Dr. Pankaj Kumar Singh Department of Animal Nutrition Bihar Animal Sciences University, Patna, Bihar, India

  2. Usefulness of feeding standards Feeding standard consists of the quantity of nutrients required by an animal to remain healthy and highly productive Feeding standards are set in accordance with productivity (milk, me at, wool, eggs), composition of the product (fat content of milk), and physiological condition (growth, fetal development). Consideration is also given to varying regional conditions in feeding standard. Feeding standards serves as guides in feeding animals and in estimating the adequacy of feed intake and of feed supplies for groups of animal. Feeding standards allow effective and profitable nutritional management of animals appropriate to the prevailing nutritional, economic and sociological environment.

  3. Limitation of feeding standards Feeding standard is not a complete guide to feeding as other factors such as palatability and the physical nature of the ration are not taken into account. Feeding standards are only approximately correct. The amounts of nutrients recommended in the table of feeding standards are intended to be sufficient to meet the food requirements of maximum production. Environment may change nutrient requirements. Feeding standard does not consider economics of livestock production. Feeding standards based on assigned nutritive values (e.g., net energy) are misleading when unconventional feed resources are used. Feeding standards are not permanent, but are reexamined with change in technology and production targets.

  4. Merits and demerits of various feeding standards TDN and DE systems Merits TDN is a measure of apparent DE but is expressed in units of weight or % rather than energy per SE. TDN value provides a relative measure of the DE content of feed; 1 kg TDN = 4.409 Mcal DE. It is easy to determine the TDN content of feedstuffs; proximate composition of feeds and faeces and digestion trial are to be done. Digestible energy can readily be determined by using a bomb calorimeter to measure the GE of feed and faeces. No chemical analyses are required.

  5. TDN and DE systems Demerits TDN system takes into account only the losses of nutrients in the faeces but not the other losses from the body. TDN system over evaluates the energy value of poor quality roughages in relation to concentrates specially so in hot environment because TDN does not consider large amounts of energy wasted in the digestion of fibrous feeds in the form of gases and heat increment andEther extract of forages largely comprise other than true fat. So a kg of TDN in roughage has less value for productive purpose than a kg of TDN in concentrate. Certain species of forage were found to have high gross energy and high TDN values due to essential oils but low ME values. The measurement of DE takes into account the losses only through faeces.

  6. SE and ME systems Merits of ME system ME represents a more accurate measure since losses in urinary and gaseous products of digestion are also accounted for. ME provides a more satisfactory measure of nutritive value than do TDN or DE. ME is cheaper and easier to obtain than NE values. The efficiency of utilization of ME takes into consideration the purpose for which it is fed, level of feeding and caloric density of the diet.

  7. 7.5 References: Agricultural and Food Research Council (AFRC) 1992 Technical Committee on Responses to Nutrients, report no. 5. Nutrient Requirements of Ruminant Animals: Energy, Farnham Royal, Commonwealth Agricultural Bureaux. BIS (2007). Indian Standard: Poultry Feeds- Specification, IS-1374. Bureau of Indian Standards, 9, Bahadur Sah Zafar Marg, Manak Bhawan, New Delhi, India. Bondi A (1987). Animal Nutrition. Wiley Inter Science. Cramptan EW and Harris LE. (1969). Applied Animal Nutrition. WH Freeman. French, M. H. (2015). The Development of Feeding Standards for Cattle. The East African Agricultural Journal 179-187. Garnsworthy P C and Wiseman J (1990). Recent Advances in Animal Nutrition, Nottingham, Nottingham University Press, pp. 255 75. ICAR. (2013). Nutrient Requirements of Poultry. Nutrient Requirements of Animals. Indian Council of Agricultural Research, New Delhi, India Maynard, L. A., Loosli, J.K., Hintz, H. F. and Warner, R. G. (1979). Animal Nutrition. 7th Edition, McGraw-Hill, New York. Mc Donald P., Edwards R.A., Greenhalgh, J.F.D., Morgan, C.A., Sinclair, L.A and Wikinson, R.G (2010). Animal nutrition. 7th edn. Prentice Hall, Harlow, UK Morrison, FB. (1917). The Modified Wolff-Lehmann Feeding Standards. Journal of Animal Science, 1: 64 69. Ponds WG, Church DC, Pond KR and Schoknecht PA. (2005). Basic Animal Nutrition and Feeding. Wiley Dreamtech India. Thomas C 2004 Feed into Milk: A New Applied Feeding System for Dairy Cows, Nottingham, Nottingham University Press. Wu, G. (2018). Principles of Animal Nutrition. CRC Press. Taylor & Francis Group, NW

  8. T H A N K S

Related


More Related Content