4.7 Article

Within-milking variation in milk composition and fatty acid profile of Holstein dairy cows

Journal

JOURNAL OF DAIRY SCIENCE
Volume 97, Issue 7, Pages 4259-4268

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.3168/jds.2013-7731

Keywords

milk composition; milk letdown; in-line milk meter

Funding

  1. Agriculture and Food Research Initiative Competitive Grant from the USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture (Washington, DC) [2010-65206-20723]
  2. undergraduate research scholarship from Penn State University
  3. NIFA [2010-65206-20723, 580895] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER

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Changes in milk composition during a milking are well characterized, but variation in milk fatty acid (FA) profile is not well described and may affect the accuracy of in-line milk composition analyzers and could potentially be used for selective segregation of milk. Within-milking samples were collected from 8 multiparous high-producing Holstein cows (54.86 +/- 6.8kg of milk/d; mean +/- standard deviation). A milk-sampling device was designed to allow collection of multiple samples during a milking without loss of vacuum or interruption of milk subsampling. Milk was collected during consecutive morning and afternoon milkings (12-h intervals) and was replicated 1wk later. Each sample represented approximately 20% of the milking and was analyzed for fat, true protein, and lactose concentration and FA profile. Milk fat concentration markedly increased over the course of milk let down (4.4 and 4.2 percentage units at the a.m. and p.m. milking, respectively), whereas milk fat globule size did not change. Milk protein and lactose concentration decreased slightly during milking. Modest changes in milk FA profile were also observed, as milk de novo and 16-C FA concentrations increased approximately 10 and 8%, respectively, whereas the concentration of preformed FA decreased about 7% during the milking. In agreement, mean milk FA chain length and unsaturation modestly decreased during milking (0.59 and 0.014 U, respectively). The observed changes in milk fat concentration during a milking are consistent with previous reports and reflect the dynamic nature of milk fat secretion from the mammary gland. Changes in milk FA profile are not expected to practically affect the accuracy of spectroscopy methods for determination of milk fat concentration. Furthermore, the small variation in FA profile during a milking limits the use of within-milking milk segregation to tailor milk FA profile.

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