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Mehdi Kazemi bonchenari

Mehdi Kazemi bonchenari

Academic rank: Professor
ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4051-1097
Education: PhD.
ScopusId: 36935904700
Faculty: Agriculture and Environment
Address: Arak University
Phone:

Research

Title
Effects of feeding wheat straw or beet pulp in starters supplemented with either soybean oil or palm fatty acids on growth performance and urinary purine derivatives in dairy calves
Type
JournalPaper
Keywords
fiber source, fat source, dairy calf, growth, rumen fermentation
Year
2023
Journal Animal Feed Science and Technology
DOI
Researchers Vahid KESHAARZ ، Mahdi Dehghan Banadaki ، Mehdi Ganjkhanloo ، Mehdi Kazemi bonchenari

Abstract

The current study aimed to evaluate the effect of wheat straw (WS) as a forage fiber source vs beet pulp (BP) as a non-forage fiber source supplemented by fat sources soybean oil (SBO) vs palm fatty acid (PLF) on growth performance, protozoal population, and urinary purine derivatives (PD) in dairy calves. Fifty-two new-born Holstein female calves (3 days of age) were assigned randomly to one of four treatments: 1) starters contained WS with SBO (WS-SBO); 2) starters contained WS with PLF (WS-PLF); 3) starters contained BP with SBO (BP-SBO); and 4) starters contained BP with PLF (BP-PLF). An equal amounts of fiber (75 g/kg dry matter) and fat (25 g/kg dry matter) was offered in experimental treatments. Milk feeding schedule was constant among experimental treatments. The starter intake was higher in calves received BP with PLF diet (P = 0.02) compared to calved received SBO diet. This coincided with fiber × fat source interaction (P = 0.05) for average daily gain (ADG) and hence BW was higher in calves fed BP along with PLF (P = 0.04). The heights for withers (P = 0.04) and hips (P = 0.01) were higher at weaning when calves received BP with PLF compared to SBO diets. Moreover, the higher ruminal concentration for short-chain fatty acids (P = 0.05) and the higher digestibility for organic matter (P = 0.03) and neutral detergent fiber (P = 0.05) were achieved when calves fed BP with PLF compared to SBO diets. Supplemental SBO reduced starter intake (P = 0.04), total dry matter intake (P = 0.01) and ADG (P = 0.01) compared to PLF diet. The protozoa population was reduced (P = 0.01) when calves were supplemented with SBO compared to calves fed PLF. Furthermore, supplemental SBO reduced total PD concentrations (P = 0.02) and consequently reduced microbial protein synthesis (P = 0.02) compared to PLF diets. Feeding BP compared to WS reduced acetate to propionate ratio (P = 0.02) during the pre-weaning period. In conclusion, based on the current study conditions, feeding W