1983
DOI: 10.1017/s1357729800001363
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A note on the optimum level of roughage inclusion in the diet of the early-weaned calf

Abstract: Forty purchased male Hereford ♂ × Friesian ♀ calves (about 14 days old) were offered concentrate diets containing 0, 170, 230 or 320 g chopped (20 mm) straw per kg. Food intake and live-weight gains of calves were increased by the inclusion of straw, but the 320 g straw treatment tended to depress intake and gain. The optimum concentration of fibre for maximizing live-weight gains was 150 g trichloracetic acid fibre per kg of diet (220 g chopped straw per kg).

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Cited by 2 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…In experiments which have demonstrated a beneficial effect on intake from the inclusion of roughage in all-pelleted diets based on cereals, the appetite of the calf may have been constrained by low fibre digestion (Thomas and Hinks, 1983;Williams, Innes, Brewer and Magadi, 1985b). In experiments which have demonstrated a beneficial effect on intake from the inclusion of roughage in all-pelleted diets based on cereals, the appetite of the calf may have been constrained by low fibre digestion (Thomas and Hinks, 1983;Williams, Innes, Brewer and Magadi, 1985b).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In experiments which have demonstrated a beneficial effect on intake from the inclusion of roughage in all-pelleted diets based on cereals, the appetite of the calf may have been constrained by low fibre digestion (Thomas and Hinks, 1983;Williams, Innes, Brewer and Magadi, 1985b). In experiments which have demonstrated a beneficial effect on intake from the inclusion of roughage in all-pelleted diets based on cereals, the appetite of the calf may have been constrained by low fibre digestion (Thomas and Hinks, 1983;Williams, Innes, Brewer and Magadi, 1985b).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%