New Zealand Journal of Agricultural Research abstracts
Grazing management and pasture composition on paired farms which differed in
the incidence of bloat
V. R. CARRUTHERS
Dairying Research Corporation
Private Bag 3123
Hamilton, New Zealand
H. V. HENDERSON
AgResearch
Ruakura Agricultural Research Centre
Private Bag 3123
Hamilton, New Zealand
Abstract Farm practices, pasture species, and pre- and
post-grazing herbage masses were monitored monthly from June 1990 to April 1991
and from August to November in 1991 and 1992 on 16 pairs of dairy farms. Each
pair included one farm with a history of bloat despite routine use of
preventatives (bloat-prone) and one farm which historically rarely observed
bloat in the absence of chemical use (bloat-free). Farms within a pair were on
similar soil types and herds had similar genetic backgrounds. The incidence of
bloat during spring was low in all years. Bloat-free farms averaged less
ryegrass (58 versus 66%) and more grasses other than ryegrass (25 versus 17%)
in pasture and higher pre- and post-grazing herbage masses than bloat-prone
farms in 1990 and 1991. Bloat-free and bloat-prone farms did not differ in
white clover content, soil fertility, milksolids production, or stocking rate.
The differences in pasture species and herbage mass suggested that differences
in management between bloat-free and bloat-prone farms may be associated with
incidence of bloat under mild bloat conditions, but their role in influencing
the occurrence of severe bloat could not be assessed.
Keywords dairy cows; grazing management; bloat; clover;
grasses; herbage mass
New Zealand Journal of Agricultural Research, 1994, Vol. 37: 535-545
0028-8233/94/3704-0535 $2.50/0 (c) The Royal Society of New Zealand
1994
PDF file of entire paper: medium quality (887K); (scanned from paper original: notes about this process)
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