CANADIAN trials have shown that using a fibre pre-treatment to dairy total mixed rations (TMR) before feeding can increase milk production efficiency by 11.3%.
The trial was carried out at the Lethbridge Research and Development Centre, in Alberta, and used 60 early lactation Holsteins fed a silage-based TMR. Split into three groups, cows were either fed the control TMR with no pre-treatment, or the TMR following application of 0.5 or 1.0 ml/kg DM of a Trichoderma reesei-derived fungal extract applied before feeding.

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The pre-treatment acts to roughen and create pits in the surface of the fibre in the ration. A is untreated and B has recieved the treatment

“The pre-treatment acts to roughen and create pits in the surface of the fibre in the ration and so increase both the rate and extent of bacterial colonisation of the fibre once in the rumen,” explained AB Vista nutritionist Dr Nicola Walker.
“This reduces the lag time before fibre digestion in the rumen begins by around one hour, and leads to improved overall digestibility of the ration.”
Table 1 outlines the main results of the trial, with the cows fed the treated TMR maintaining fat-corrected milk (FCM) yield with 2kg/day less in dry matter intake (DMI).
The overall effect was a significant improvement in milk production efficiency from 1.50 to 1.67kg FCM/kg DMI, plus a trend towards improved milk protein content.
“These changes are what you’d expect if energy supply increased as a result of an improvement in ration digestibility – more production from the same feed, or as in this case, the same production from less feed,” said Dr Walker.
“The possible increase in milk protein is also indicative of increased energy supply to the cow. These results back up the findings of similar trials that have taken place in Europe.”
In a commercial-scale trial in a UK dairy last year, using 50 first lactation heifers, pre-treatment increased TMR D-value (63% to 67%), milk yield (+1.3 litres/cow) and milk protein (3.58% to 3.70%).
Improvements in fertility were also observed, with a higher rate of confirmed pregnancies (84% vs 64%). A large-scale trial in Bulgaria using 310 cows fed a maize silage-based TMR saw feed efficiency improvements lift yields by 1 litre/cow.
“One of the main priorities for UK milk producers at the moment is to maximise milk from all feeds, not just forage,” Dr Walker continued.
“And because fibre typically makes up 45-50% of the dry matter consumed, and is the slowest digesting fraction of the diet in the rumen, any improvement in fibre digestion efficiency has a substantial impact on overall feed efficiency.
“Not only does this potentially increase productive performance, but as the UK trial shows it may also have an impact on fertility.
“The impact is particularly beneficial during early lactation, when energy requirements exceed intake and cows spend the first few weeks post-calving in negative energy balance,” said Dr Walker.