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The effect of the density and physical properties of grass stems on the foraging behaviour and instantaneous intake rate by cattle grazing an artificial reproductive tropical sward
Authors:M. A. Benvenutti&dagger  &Dagger  ,I. J. Gordon, D. P. Poppi&dagger  
Affiliation:Sustainable Ecosystems, CSIRO –Davies Laboratory, Aitkenvale, Qld, Australia;, Schools of Animal Studies and Veterinary Science, University of Queensland, St Lucia, Qld, Australia;, and INTA EEA Cerro Azul, Misiones, Argentina
Abstract:In reproductive swards, stems appear to act as vertical or horizontal barriers to bite formation, influencing instantaneous intake rate (IIR). The hypothesis was tested that the stems’ barrier effect is determined by the physical properties and density of stems. Artificial microswards, consisting of 20‐cm leaves and 15‐cm stems of Panicum maximum, were offered to three steers (362 kg) in a factorial combination of three stem densities (0, 100 and 400 stems m?2) and two levels of stem tensile resistance [low (LTRS) and high tensile‐resisting stems (HTRS)]. LTRS were not a barrier to defoliation and did not affect bite depth and bite mass. HTRS acted as both a horizontal barrier and a vertical barrier depressing bite depth (13·4, 13·6 and 5·1 cm for 0, 100 and 400 stems m?2, respectively), bite area (89·3, 50·8 and 47·6 cm2 for 0, 100 and 400 stems m?2, respectively), bite mass (0·51, 0·29 and 0·11 g for 0, 100 and 400 stems m?2, respectively) and IIR (23·8, 10·5 and 3·6 g sec?2 for 0, 100 and 400 stems m?2, respectively). The results confirmed the importance of the density and physical properties of stems as determinants of the stems’ barrier effect on bite dimensions and IIR.
Keywords:bite dimensions    foraging behaviour    stem physical properties    sward structure
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