M. Undi et Km. Wittenberg, EFFECT OF FUNGAL BIOMASS IN MOLDY ALFALFA HAY ON PREFERENCE BY DAIRY CALVES WITH NO PREVIOUS EXPOSURE TO MOLDY FEEDS, Journal of dairy science, 79(7), 1996, pp. 1250-1254
A study of 141-kg dairy calves evaluated their preference for alfalfa
hay that contained different amounts of fungal biomass, which was esti
mated by the glucosamine assay. Alfalfa that was harvested at differen
t maturities and stored at varying DM contents was chopped and blended
to produce four forage treatments. The four forage treatments include
d hay that had 1) low NDF content and a low amount of fungal biomass,
2) high NDF and low fungal biomass, 3) high NDF and moderate fungal bi
omass, and 4) high NDF and high fungal biomass. Forage treatments were
offered in pair combinations with two feeders per calf; treatments we
re switched from one feeder to the other on alternate days. The four f
orage treatments were offered in such a way that all six pair combinat
ions were tested in each period. Each of the two trials was designed a
s a 6 x 6 Latin square. Preference data were collected for the 6-d per
iods and were analyzed as a split plot. Difference in intake of paired
forage treatments was the response variable. Hay preference declined
as either fiber content of hay or amount of fungal biomass in hay incr
eased. Forage intake of each treatment relative to mean intake was 3.3
, 0.8, -0.5 and -3.7 kg/6 d for forage treatments 1, 2, 3, and 4, resp
ectively. Low preference for molded hay would probably result in great
er feed sorting and lower intakes when calves have a choice of feedstu
ffs.