Lecture 22 and 23 Flashcards
How does feed cost and net income for pork producers in Saskatchewan relate?
They’re inversely related
feed is the farmers biggest cost (63% in 2020)
Does production drive nutrition or does nutrition drive production?
In dairy cows, early lactation, feed intake doesn’t matter they will produce milk no matter what. Mid to late lactation, feed intake determines milk production
Definition of hunger, preference, selection, appetite, palatability
- Hunger - a strong need or desire for food
- Preference - what animals select given minimal physical constraints
- Selection - preference modified by environmental circumstances
- Appetite - an instinctive physical desire, especially one for food or drink
- Palatability - acceptable to the taste; agreeable in flavour to be eaten- acceptable or agreeable to the mind
Definition of satiety, orexigenic, anorexigenic, adlibitum, pica
- Satiety - the condition of being full or gratified beyond the point of satisfaction
- Orexigenic - increasing or stimulating the appetite
- Anorexigenic - producing anorexia, an agent that diminishes or controls the appetite
- Ad libitum - ‘at one’s pleasure’ or food is available at all times
- Pica - is the persistent craving and compulsive eating of nonfood substances (lack of phosphourous or boredom)
What are examples of farm animals not being fed ad libitum?
- Sows in gestation are limit fed to avoid too high of back fat before and after farrowing
- Broiler breeders
- smetimes companion animals
What are the two main categories of feed supply?
- Diet is supplied (pigs, chickens, dairy cows) - animal has no choice, responsibility of provider to meet the nutrient requirements
- The animal is responsible for feed (nutrient) selection (animals on range)
What are the mechanisms of feed intake control?
- Feedback from the gastrointestinal tract
- Metabolites and hormones
- Central nervous system
- Learning about food: conditioned preferences and aversions
- Diet selection
What are factors that would affect feed intake?
Feed
* availability
* Quality
Environment
Animal
* Integration with the CNS
* Gastrointestinal
* Adipose tissue
* Hormones
* Metabolites
* Learning
What is feed intake control?
Short-term
* Meal size
* Frequency of meals
Long-term
* Homeostasis
* Homeorhesis (adaptive state-new state of metabolism)
* Maintenance of body weight and adiposity
How to measure food intake?
- Simplest - measure feed before and after eating
- actually measuring disappearance
- Marker dilution - intake determined from ratio between marker in the feed and the feces (must know feed digestibility)
What is eating behaviour and feed availability like in swine?
- Grow finish pigs typical consume 10 to 20 meals per day
- smaller pigs eat more meals
- increasing the number of pigs accessing a feeder space will reduce the number of meals
- pigs spend about 40% less time eating pellets than mash
- eating behaviour is variable
- Pigs can maintain feed intake levels despite varying environmental conditions
What is the equation for food intake for grazing animals?
food intake, g/d = grazing time (min/d) x biting rate (n/min) x bite size (g)
What are methods for finding food intake for grazing animals?
- using digestibility and fecal collection
- difference between forage mass before and after grazing
- feeding behaviour, bits, biting rate and grazing time
How does environment (stress) affect feed intake?
- Most work conducted with lab animals
- Response dependent upon duration of stressor and whether the stress is physical or physiological
- In rats, mild stressors such as a pinch will stimulate feeding and drinking following the stress
- More extreme stress inhibits feed intake
- body weight reductions observed with stress only slowly regained
What are some issues with feed quality?
- High or low energy concentration
- Toxic compounds
- Nutrient deficiencies