Protein is an expensive component of the dairy cow diet, and overfeeding protein can have adverse economic and environmental impacts. Our objective was to maintain milk production and components while decreasing dietary crude protein (CP) through use of a heat-treated, rumen-resistant sugar amino acid complex (SAAC) as the Schiff base, as an addition to low-protein diets. Dietary treatments included a negative control [NC, 146 g of CP/kg of dry matter (DM)], a positive control (PC, 163 g of CP/kg of DM), and the NC supplemented with SAAC in lieu of some barley grain (SAAD, 151 g of CP/kg of DM). Diets were fed to 30 multiparous Holstein-Friesian dairy cows for the first 50 d postpartum. Dry matter intake (DMI) was determined daily. Milk yield and content of fat, protein, lactose, and casein were recorded weekly from wk 2 to 7 of lactation. The fixed effects of treatment, week, treatment × week, month of calving, and BCS at calving, and a random effect of cow, were analyzed using the MIXED procedure of SAS (SAS Institute Inc., Cary, NC). The SAAD treatment had greater energy-corrected milk yield than did NC. The PC treatment had greater DMI than did NC, and SAAD tended to have greater DMI than did NC. We found significant treatment effects for fat percentage and yield. The NC and SAAD treatments had higher fat percentages than did PC, and SAAD had a higher fat yield than did the NC and PC treatments. Treatment effects were found for casein yield and percentage. We discovered a treatment effect for protein percentage and yield. The PC treatment had higher protein percentage than did NC and SAAD. The PC treatment had a higher protein yield than did NC, and analysis revealed no difference in protein yield between PC and SAAD. The SAAD treatment had higher total milk solids than did the NC treatment. Lactose yield tended to be higher in PC than in NC, and no differences were found between PC and NC and SAAD treatments. The PC treatment had a higher casein percentage than did NC and SAAD; however, the SAAD and PC treatments had higher casein yields than did NC. The PC treatment had a higher casein:fat ratio than did the NC and SAAD treatments. The NC and SAAD treatments had higher Cheddar cheese yields than did PC. We found no treatment × week interactions for any parameter. Supplementing low-protein dairy cow diets with a heat-treated, rumen-resistant SAAC caused beneficial effects by improving milk components and increasing cheese yield to levels similar to those found when feeding expensive and environmentally damaging high-protein diets.
Keywords: Schiff base; carbohydrate; milk production; protein.
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