4.7 Article

Effect of active dry yeast on lactation performance, methane production, and ruminal fermentation patterns in early-lactating Holstein cows

Journal

JOURNAL OF DAIRY SCIENCE
Volume 104, Issue 1, Pages 381-390

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.3168/jds.2020-18594

Keywords

yeast product; nutrient digestibility; milk production; methane emission

Funding

  1. earmarked fund for Modern Agro-industry Technology Research System (Beijing, China) [CARS-36]
  2. Hebei Dairy Cattle Innovation Team of Modern Agro-industry Technology Research System (Shijiazhuang, China) [HBCT2018120203]
  3. key research and development project of Hebei (Shijiazhuang, China) [19226625D]
  4. Precision Animal Husbandry Discipline Group Construction Project of Hebei Agricultural University (Hebei, China)
  5. Nation Natural Science Foundation of China (Beijing, China) [31802254]

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This study demonstrated that supplementing early-lactating cows with ADY improved lactation performance by increasing nutrient digestibility, with an optimal dose of 20 g/d per head.
This study was conducted to examine the effect of active dry yeast (ADY) supplementation on lactation performance, ruminal fermentation patterns, and CH4 emissions and to determine an optimal ADY dose. Sixty Holstein dairy cows in early lactation (52 +/- 1.2 DIM) were used in a randomized complete design. Cows were blocked by parity (2.1 +/- 1 0.2), milk production (35 +/- 4.6 kg/d), and body weight (642 +/- 53 kg) and assigned to 1 of 4 treatments. Cows were fed ADY at doses of 0, 10, 20, or 30 g/d per head for 91 d, with 84 d for adaptation and 7 d for sampling. Although dry matter intake was not affected by ADY supplementation, the yield of actual milk, 4% fat-corrected milk, milk fat yield, and feed efficiency increased quadratically with increasing ADY supplementation. Yields of milk protein and lactose increased linearly with increasing A DY doses, whereas milk urea nitrogen concentration and somatic cell count decreased quadratically. Ruminal pH and ammonia concentration were not affected by A DY supplementation, whereas ruminal concentration of total volatile fatty acid increased quadratically. Digestibility of dry matter, organic matter, neutral detergent fiber, acid detergent fiber, nonfiber carbohydrate, and crude protein increased quadratically with increasing ADY supplementation. Supplementation of ADY did not affect blood concentration of total protein, triglyceride, aspartate aminotransferase, and alanine aminotransferase, whereas blood urea nitrogen, cholesterol, and nonesterified fatty acid concentrations decreased quadratically with increasing ADY supplementation. Methane production was not affected by ADY supplementation when expressed as grams per day or per kilogram of actual milk yield, dry matter intake, digested organic matter, and digested nonfiber carbohydrate, whereas a trend of linear and quadratic decrease of CH4 production was observed when expressed as grams per kilogram of fat-corrected milk and digested neutral detergent fiber. In conclusion, feeding ADY to early-lactating cows improved lactation performance by increasing nutrient digestibility. The optimal ADY dose should be 20 g/d per head.

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