4.7 Article

Feeding a C16:0-enriched fat supplement increased the yield of milk fat and improved conversion of feed to milk

Journal

JOURNAL OF DAIRY SCIENCE
Volume 96, Issue 10, Pages 6650-6659

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.3168/jds.2013-6892

Keywords

dairy cow; fat supplementation; milk fat; palmitic acid

Funding

  1. Malaysian Palm Oil Board (Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia)
  2. Michigan State University Elwood Kirkpatrick Dairy Science Research Endowment and Graf Memorial Student Fellowship
  3. Berg+Schmidt Functional Lipids (Hamburg, Germany)

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Previous work has indicated that dietary palmitic acid (C16:0) may increase milk fat yield. The effect of a dietary C16:0-enriched fat supplement on feed intake, yield of milk and milk components, and feed efficiency was evaluated in an experiment with a crossover arrangement of treatments with 25-d periods. A fermentable starch challenge on the last 4 d of each period was utilized as a split-plot within period. Sixteen mid-lactation Holstein cows (249 +/- 33 d in milk) were assigned randomly to treatment sequence. Treatments were either a C16:0-enriched (similar to 85% 016:0) fat supplement (fatty acid treatment, FAT, 2% dry matter) or a control diet (CON) containing no supplemental fat. Diets containing dry ground corn grain were fed from d 1 through 21 of each period. On the last 4 d of each period, dry ground corn was replaced by high-moisture corn grain on an equivalent dry matter basis to provide a fermentable starch challenge. Response variables were averaged for d 18 to 21 (immediately before the fermentable starch challenge) and d 22 to 25 (during the fermentable starch challenge). We observed no treatment effects on milk yield or milk protein yield. The FAT treatment increased milk fat concentration from 3.88 to 4.16% and fat yield from 1.23 to 1.32 kg/d compared with CON. The FAT treatment decreased dry matter intake by 1.4 kg/d and increased conversion of feed to milk (3.5% fat-corrected milk yield/dry matter intake) by 8.6% compared with CON. The increase in milk fat yield by FAT was entirely accounted for by a 27% increase in 16-carbon fatty acid output into milk. Yields of de novo and preformed fatty acids were not affected by FAT relative to CON. The fermentable starch challenge did not affect milk fat concentration or yield. Results demonstrate the potential for a dietary 016:0-enriched fat supplement to improve milk fat concentration and yield as well as efficiency of conversion of feed to milk. Further studies are required to verify and extend these results and to determine whether responses are similar across different diets and levels of milk production.

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