Autores
Bruno Fagundes Cunha Lage, Severino Delmar Junqueira Villela, Joslaine Noely dos Santos Gonçalves Cyrillo, Renata Helena Branco, Maria Eugênia Zerlotti Mercadante, Lucia Galvão de Albuquerque
Relationships between feeding behavior and average daily gain in cattle
Resumo
Relações entre comportamento alimentar e classes de ganho médio diário em bovinos
Abstract
Several
studies have reported relationship between eating behavior and performance in
feedlot cattle. The evaluation of behavior traits demands high degree of work
and trained manpower, therefore, in recent years has been used an automated
feed intake measurement system (GrowSafe System ®), that identify and record
individual feeding patterns. The aim of this study was to evaluate the
relationship between feeding behavior traits and average daily gain in Nellore calves undergoing
feed efficiency test. Date from 85 Nelore males was recorded during the feed
efficiency test performed in 2012, at Centro APTA Bovinos de Corte, Instituto
de Zootecnia, São Paulo
State. Were analyzed the
behavioral traits: time at feeder (TF), head down duration (HD), representing
the time when the animal is actually eating, frequency of visits (FV) and feed
rate (FR) calculated as the amount of dry matter (DM) consumed by time at
feeder (g.min-1). The ADG was calculated by linear regression of
individual weights on days in test. ADG classes were obtained considering the
average ADG and standard deviation (SD) being: high ADG (>mean + 1.0 SD),
medium ADG (± 1.0 SD from the mean) and low ADG (<mean - 1.0 SD). Data were
analyzed using the PROC MIXED procedure (SAS 9.3). The model included animal
and residue as random effects and the fixed effects of ADG class (1, 2 and 3)
and age at the middle of test as a covariate. Low gain animals remained 21.8% less
time of head down than medium or high gain animals (P<0.05). Were observed significant effects of ADG class on FR (P<0.01), high ADG animals consumed
more feed per time (g.min-1) than the low and medium ADG animals. No diferences
were observed (P>0.05) among ADG
classes for FV, indicating that these traits are not related to each other. These
results shows that the ADG is related to the agility in eat food and not to the
time spent in the bunk or to the number of visits in a range of 24 hours.
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