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The effect of plane of nutrition during rearing on growth, production, reproduction and health of dairy cattle. II. Growth to maturity

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 March 1960

J. A. Crichton
Affiliation:
Rowett Research Institute, Bucksburn, Aberdeenshire
J. N. Aitken
Affiliation:
Rowett Research Institute, Bucksburn, Aberdeenshire
A. W. Boyne
Affiliation:
Rowett Research Institute, Bucksburn, Aberdeenshire
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Extract

1. The four systems of rearing dairy heifer calves, described in Part 1 of this series are now studied for their effect on absolute and relative growth rates to maturity.

2. Data on live-weights and measurements and the percentages of mature size attained by these at 44, 80, 104, 132, 182, 260 and 312 weeks of age are tabulated.

3. In all groups the measurement to reach maturity earliest was circumference of metacarpus followed in order by length of back, height at withers and width of hooks.

4. By 6 years of age all groups had attained approximately the same body size. Maturity in the LL group in terms of four skeletal measurements was delayed by only 9 months, and in the case of HL and LH animals by 5 and 4 months respectively.

5. All groups showed the same general pattern of relative growth but the effect of restricted feeding was to increase at the younger ages the difference i n percentage of mature size between early and late maturing measurements. After 44 weeks of age the rate of growth was most rapid in those measurements which were furthest from maturity then.

6. The rate of tissue deposition was markedly increased in high plane animals during early pregnancy compared with low plane. Evidence is presented to show that much of this was lost during lactation.

7. At first oestrus, animals in all four treatment groups had reached the same percentage of mature size for each body dimension (except for length of back in the LL group).

8. From data on 5 animals it is shown that although growth in height at withers and length of back ceased by 6 years of age there was slow but continuous growth in live-weight, middle and heart girths and width of hooks to 9 years of age.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © British Society of Animal Science 1960

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References

REFERENCES

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