J. Strzetelski et al., Effect of milk replacer feeding frequency and level on concentrate intake and rearing performance of calves, J ANIM FEED, 10(3), 2001, pp. 413-420
Fifty-four Black-and-White bull calves divided into 5 groups of 10-11 anima
ls aged from 6-8 to 120 days, were used to study the effect of liquid feedi
ng frequency and the amount of milk replacer on concentrate intake and rear
ing performance. The milk replacer contained: dried skim milk, whey, butter
milk, and processed soya protein. The liquid feed was fed from 7 to 56 days
of age once (S), twice (D) or three (T) times a day at limited feeding (L
and L-1/2), or feeding to appetite (V). The intake of milk replacer per cal
f in the experimental period was: 54 kg (groups SL, DL, TL), 27 kg (group S
L1/2) or 87 kg of dried milk replacer (group TV). In groups SL, DL, TL, SL1
/2 and TV, the liquid feed contained 155.5 g of solid milk replacer per kg
of solution, and in group SV, 262 g of milk replacer per ka solution. All o
f the calves received concentrate to appetite and meadow hay (0.1-0.3 kg/da
y). It was found that at a similar intake of milk replacer (51 kg DM/calf)
and once-daily liquid feeding compared with feeding twice and three times a
day, daily weight gains were lower during the liquid feeding period, decre
asing by 23% (594 g/day) despite an approximately 20% higher intake of conc
entrate. For the whole experimental period, these differences were insignif
icant at 7 and 4%, respectively. Calves of group SL1/2 consumed a similar a
mount of concentrate and achieved similar weight gains as those from group
SL, which received twice as much milk replacer.
In the other groups, calves consumed less concentrate but had higher daily
liveweight gains. Feeding liquid feed (83 kg DM/calf) to appetite did not s
ignificantly affect daily concentrate intake and weight gains of calves in
group TV compared with groups DL and TL, both during the liquid feeding per
iod (838, 754 and 788 g/day, respectively) and during the whole experimenta
l period (1080, 1026 and 1065 g/day, respectively). In all the groups after
weaning, compensatory growth resulted in high daily weight gains of calves
above 1200 g/day (P >0.05). The highest compensatory growth was found in g
roups SL and SL1/2.