Large animal maternal nutrition Flashcards

1
Q

Mare gestation, lactation and weaning lengths

A

Gestation = 11 months 11 days
-Early = first 4 months
-Late = last 4 months

Lactation
-Early = first 2 months
-Late = months 3+

Weaning @ 4-6 months

Maintenance

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2
Q

Beef cow gestation, lactation, weaning length

A

Gestation
-Late = last 2 months

Lactation
-Early = first 80 days

Weaning = 6-10 months
calf 400-600lb

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3
Q

Dairy cow gestation, lactation, weaning length

A

Gestation = 275-280 days
-Late (close-up) = last 2-3 weeks

transition dairy cow

Lactation
-Peak @ 45-90 days, w/in 1st 150 days in milk

Weaning w/in 24hr

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4
Q

Nutritional Goals for the Dam

A

Maximize production (offspring, milk)
Maintain rumen and hindgut health

Reduce risk of …
Negative energy balance
Ketosis / Pregnancy toxemia
Hepatic lipidosis
Increased risk of infection
Hypocalcemia

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5
Q

Ideal BCS for mare prior to pregnancy

A

5/9-6/9

IMPROVE BEFORE BREEDING

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6
Q

Ideal Dairy Cow BCS prior to pregnancy

A

Target 3.0/5-3.5/5

< 3 associated with lower milk yield & greater risk of milk fever

> 3.5-4 associated with lower DM intake during lactation, lower milk yield, higher risk of ketosis

Adjust in late lactation

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7
Q

Dairy Cow BCS loss >1 during lactation is associated with…

A

Longer time to first ovulation
Longer time to first service
Lower conception rate at first service

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8
Q

Ideal Beef Cow BCS prior to pregnancy

A

Target 5/9-6/9

1/9-4/9 associated with reduced pregnancy rates, longer postpartum intervals & conception later in breeding season and thus calves born later

8/9-9/9 fat

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9
Q

Water requirements in the mare and cow during lactation

A

> 120ml/kg BW
2-3x higher during lactation than maintenance (~60ml/kg BW)

Free choice potable & palatable
Parallels energy requirement

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10
Q

Protein in addition to maintenance requirements (e.g. for muscle, hormones, enzymes, etc.), needed for feti and associated….

A

Tissue development

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11
Q

Protein source in the mare and cow

A

Diet (mare)
Diet AND microbial (cow)

Crude protein (nitrogen)
Metabolizable protein represents absorbed AA
Net protein represents retained protein

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12
Q

Protein deficiency in pregnancy adverse effects

A

Reduced weight gain in the dam
Reduced birth weights +/- growth rate post-weaning
Reduced immunity

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13
Q

Fat requirements in cows and mares

A

Requirement UNCLEAR

Energy density (very)

Rumen microbial hydrolysis, hydrogenation & conjugation of PUFAs
-Odd chain fatty acid
-Conjugated linoleic acid (CLA)

Excess ->
Diarrhea
Reduced microbial fermentation

Vitamin E protects PUFAs

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14
Q

Hypocalcemia in the Dairy Cow

A

CS – tetany (milk fever)

Risk factors:
Lactation (2 months post calving)
Anorexia / hyporexia
Inappropriate diet i.e. high Ca diets prior to calving

Treatment: parenteral calcium

Prevent with proper transition diet

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15
Q

Calcium is needed in cows for…

A

Milk production
Bone/endochondral ossification

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16
Q

Copper bioavailability is reduced with excess…

A

dietary phosphorus, zinc and/or molybdenum

17
Q

A deficiency in copper is associated with offspring __________.

A

physitis

18
Q

Carbohydrate sources in mare/cow diet

A

Physical fiber
VFA production
Euglycemia (horse)

19
Q

Cow/mare ration should consist of…

A

Forage

+/- concentrate
Commonly fed to mares
Depends on forage quality & availability

Vitamin/mineral
If not feeding enough concentrate to meet needs

20
Q

Dairy Cow Ration is typically…

A

Total mixed ration (TMR)

Higher milk fat & milk production with TMR vs. pasture + concentrate

21
Q

Anticipated dry matter (DM) intake in the mare

A

Varies deepening on stage

Early gestation 2% (varies!)
Late gestation 2% BW
Lactation 2.5% BW

22
Q

Anticipated dry matter (DM) intake
in the dairy cow

A

Varies depending on the stage

Limited in late gestation
Week 1-6 of lactation 2.5 – 3.5% BW
Week 8-16 of lactation 3.5 – 4.0% BW
Week 16+ of lactation 2.5 – 3.0% BW

23
Q

Neutral detergent fiber (NDF) is negatively correlated with…

A

Forage quality
As NDF increases (more mature plant), quality decreases

Generally, alfalfa is more energy and protein dense than grass

24
Q

The % of NDF should be lower during (early or late gesation)

A

Late gestation (NDF adds bulk and not a lot of space in stomach during late pregnancy)

25
Q

Endophyte Infected fescue may lead to…

A

Abortion, placentitis, agalactia
Summer slump, fescue foot

26
Q

Concentrates should not be added to the diet if…

A

If BCS and muscle condition is ideal with forage, than no need for concentrates (i.e. forage alone appears to be meeting energy & protein needs

27
Q

Commercial Concentrate for Cows

A

Labeled for “cow & calf”

Balancing …
nutritional needs
cost of feeds

28
Q

Generally concentrates should be discontinues __-__ weeks prior to weaning

A

1-2

(Individually, consider BCS & rebreeding status)

29
Q

Monitoring diet during/after gestation

A

Repro records
Production
BCS
Dry matter (DM) intake
Watch the herd eat
Blood glucose
BUN (low with low DMI intake)
Potassium (low with low DMI intake)
Beta hydroxyl butyrate (BHB; elevated with low DMI; 2018 VanSaun)