4.7 Article

Varying plantain content in temperate ryegrass-white clover pastures affects urinary-nitrogen excretion of non-lactating dairy cows

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 862, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.160847

Keywords

Plantain; Nitrogen; Cow urine; Leaching

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This experiment investigated the effect of increasing proportions of plantain in the diet of dairy cows on urine nitrogen excretion. The results showed that as the proportion of plantain in the diet increased, urine nitrogen concentration significantly decreased, but total urine nitrogen excretion did not change significantly. This suggests that plantain can reduce nitrogen leaching at the urine patch level, but higher proportions of plantain are needed.
Dairy cow urine patches contain high rates of nitrogen (N; >500 kg N/ha) and represent the main source of N loss from grazed pastoral systems. Emerging research has identified plantain (Plantago lanceolata) as a key forage to potentially reduce urine N (UN) losses from dairy cows. This experiment examined the effect of increasing proportions of plantain in the diet of dairy cows on UN excretion relative to a ryegrass-white clover diet. Twenty mixed aged non-lactating dairy cows were randomly assigned to one of five treatment diets; 0%, 20 %, 40%, 60% or 100% plantain (dry matter basis), with the remainder comprised of ryegrass-white clover pasture and grass-silage. Cows were fitted with urine sensors to measure urination event N concentration, volume and frequency. Daily N intake increased with increasing proportions of plantain in the diet due to the greater N concentration of plantain. Conversely, mean UN concentration was reduced as the proportion of plantain in the diet increased. Urine-N concentration was >40 % lower for cows on 100 % plantain compared with 0 % plantain (0.46 and 0.81 % N respectively). There was no treatment effect on the total daily amount of UN excreted, indicating a dilution effect of plantain as total daily urine volumes markedly increased with increasing plantain diets. Nitrogen load per urination event was lower for cows on 100 % plantain than 0 % despite greater N intake, with no significant difference for the intermediate treatment groups. The reduced N load per event for cows on >60 % plantain could help to reduce N leaching losses at the urine patch level. This experiment suggests that a reduction in UN concentration can be achieved on low levels of plantain (20% of the diet), but >60 % plantain diets are required to reduce N load per event.

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