Energetic efficiency was evaluated in composite bred heifers born from dams receiving 1•8 or 1•2 kg/d winter supplementation for approximately 80 d before parturition. Heifers were then developed post-weaning and randomly assigned to heifer development treatments of either control (100 %; ad libitum; n 8/year) or restricted (80 %; fed 80 % of supplementation fed to controls adjusted to a common body weight: n 8/year) in a 2-year study. A glucose tolerance test (GTT) and acetate irreversible loss test (AILT) were administered to heifers at the termination of a 140 d development period when the heifers were approximately 403 d of age and consumed a silage-based diet, and again at 940 d of age when pregnant with their second calf and grazing dormant forage. No differences were measured (P>0•08) for dam winter nutrition or heifer development treatment for baseline serum metabolites or measures in either the GTT or the AILT. However, changes in baseline serum concentrations (P>0•05) were different between metabolic challenges, which occurred at different stages of development. No difference in acetate disappearance (P = 0•18) and half-life (P = 0•66) was measured between the two metabolic challenges. A trend for glucose half-life to be shorter in heifers born from dams receiving in utero winter treatments that supplied 1•2 kg/d of winter supplementation was observed (P = 0•083). Heifers developed with lower total DM intake during a 140 d development period had similar glucose and acetate incorporation rates as ad libitum-fed heifers when evaluated at two different production stages. © 2011 The Authors.
CITATION STYLE
Waterman, R. C., Roberts, A. J., Geary, T. W., Grings, E. E., Alexander, L. J., & MacNeil, M. D. (2011). Effect of reduced heifer nutrition during in utero and post-weaning development on glucose and acetate kinetics. British Journal of Nutrition, 106(11), 1702–1712. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0007114511002224
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