Effect of variable water intake as mediated by dietary potassium carbonate supplementation on rumen dynamics in lactating dairy cows

Mar 10, 2015Journal of dairy science

How changing water intake and potassium carbonate in diet affect digestion in dairy cows producing milk

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Abstract

Water intake increased linearly with K2CO3 supplementation, reaching 129.3 L/d for the highest level.

  • Milk, milk fat, and protein yields showed quadratic responses, with the highest yields occurring at 0.75% added dietary potassium.
  • Dry matter intake was greatest at 0.75% added potassium, measuring 21.8 kg/d compared to 20.4 kg/d and 20.5 kg/d for lower and higher potassium levels.
  • Rumen fluid passage rate increased with higher potassium supplementation, indicating enhanced ruminal turnover.
  • Rumen ammonia concentrations decreased and pH levels increased linearly as potassium supplementation rose.
  • Volatile fatty acid profiles shifted, with acetate increasing and propionate decreasing in response to increased dietary potassium.

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