4.7 Article

Double-muscled and conventional cattle have the same net energy requirements if these are related to mature and current body protein mass, and to gain composition

Journal

JOURNAL OF ANIMAL SCIENCE
Volume 90, Issue 11, Pages 3973-3987

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.2527/jas.2011-4314

Keywords

body composition; cattle; conjugated linoleic acid; double-muscling; energy requirements; Piedmontese breed

Funding

  1. Office for Agriculture of the Provincia di Padova

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The hypothesis tested in this paper is that double-muscled (DBM) and conventional cattle, considerably differing in body composition, have similar NE requirements when: a) NEm is scaled as a function of current (P-i) and adult (P-m) protein mass; and b) ME for gain (MEg) is estimated from protein (Pr) and lipid (Lr) retention and their partial ME use efficiencies, the k(p) and k(l) values, respectively. First, 2 databases were examined: 1 was developed combining well known literature information from comparative slaughter trials conducted on British beef steers; the other was based on a trial conducted using extremely lean DBM Piemontese bulls. From the first database, NEm was calculated to be 1.625 x P-i divided by P-m x P-m(0.73) (MJ/kg(0.73)). From the second database, the daily MEg was determined as 22.8 MJ x Pr divided by k(p) + 38.74 MJ x Lr divided by k(l), assuming (from prior reports) that k(p) = 0.20 and k(l) = 0.75. Thereafter, MEm was defined as ME intake minus MEg, and, hence, NEm was predicted as 1.625 x P-i divided by P-m x P-m(0.73) (where 1.625 was the value obtained from the first dataset). The resulting k(m) (NEm/MEm) averaged 0.67. This k(m) value did not differ from that (0.65; P = 0.12) predicted by Garrett's equation, which uses dietary ME content as the only predictive variable. Second, the procedure was tested for the ability to detect effects on km caused by increasing BW and dietary factors not estimable from the dietary ME content only. Data were gathered from a trial involving 48 DBM Piemontese bulls divided into 4 groups fed 1 of 4 diets differing in CP content (145 or 108 g/kg DM), with or without addition of 80 g/d of rumen-protected CLA (rpCLA). Bulls were examined at 3 consecutive periods of growth, corresponding to 365, 512 and 631 kg of average BW. All energy balance items were influenced by increasing BW, except k(m) (P = 0.61), in agreement with the expectation that NEm requirement depends on the degree of maturity (P-i/P-m) and the P-m(0.73) of an animal, whereas k(m) reflects characteristics of the feed provided. The k(m) value was also influenced by the CP x rpCLA interaction (P = 0.013). We conclude that DBM and British beef steers have similar NE requirements when these are scaled as a function of P-i and P-m, and gain composition, considering Pr, k(p), Lr and k(l). The proposed procedure will be useful to predict the energy requirements and feed use in cattle of different types that vary in BW, provided that body and gain compositions are known or accurately predicted.

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