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SUB-ACUTE RUMINAL ACIDOSIS IN DAIRY COWS: ITS CAUSES, CONSEQUENCES AND PREVENTIVE MEASURES

(2020) SUB-ACUTE RUMINAL ACIDOSIS IN DAIRY COWS: ITS CAUSES, CONSEQUENCES AND PREVENTIVE MEASURES. Online Journal of Animal and Feed Research. pp. 302-312. ISSN 22287701 (ISSN)

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Abstract

Current feeding programs for cattle prescribe concentrate rich diets to meet their ever increasing demands for high levels of milk production. These diets, however, can impair rumen health and thus cattle production, milk yield and welfare. High energy diets are rapidly fermented in the rumen because they are high in fermentable starch, low in NDF and contain finely chopped digestible forages. Feeding rapidly fermentable diet to the cows predominantly adapted to digest and metabolize forage based total mixed ration (TMR) substantially increases short term milk yield, but the risk of sub- acute ruminal acidosis (SARA) increases. Additionally, too high concentrate to forage ratio, too fast a switch from high forage to high concentrate, diet composed of highly fermented feeds, improperly mixed TMR and mycotoxins in feed also increases the incidence of SARA in dairy herds. SARA causes depressed feed intake, cycling feeding, reduced cud chewing, poor fibre digestion, rumenitis, mastitis, metritis, dehydration, diarrhoea, abomasal displacement, pulmonary bacterial emboli, systemic inflammation, liver abscesses, low milk fat, low milk protein, sore hooves, laminitis and low fertility. Therefore, SARA is a major challenge for animal health, productivity, economic efficiency and welfare issue even in well managed dairy herds. Feeding higher amounts of forages, supplying adequate peNDF, processing grains less thoroughly, reducing fermentability of the carbohydrate fraction and adapting rumen to the dietary changes are the key factors to be considered for preventing SARA. Continued research for accurate quantification of peNDF in diet, grain processing, optimization of meal size, dietary cation-anion balance, narrowspectrum rumen modifier, inoculation of lactate utilizing microbes, inhibition of lactate producing microbes and innovation of the unique fermentability characteristics of feed ingredients to promote sufficient buffering and rapid absorption of VFA from rumen will explore new horizon for reducing incidence of SARA in future. © 2020, Online Journal of Animal and Feed Research. All Rights Reserved

Item Type: Article
Keywords: Acidosis Cattle Dairy herd Rumen Total mixed ration
Subjects: S Agriculture > SF Animal culture
Divisions: Online Journal of Animal and Feed Research (OJAFR)
Page Range: pp. 302-312
Journal or Publication Title: Online Journal of Animal and Feed Research
Journal Index: Scopus
Volume: 10
Number: 6
Publisher: Scienceline Publication
Identification Number: https://doi.org/10.51227/ojafr.2020.41
ISSN: 22287701 (ISSN)
Depositing User: Dr. Saeid Chekani-Azar
URI: http://eprints.science-line.com/id/eprint/39

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