Avenue media on behalf of Scientific Association of Animal Production (ASPA)
Abstract
In the light of recent findings in sheep nutrition and behaviour, the diets of grazing dairy sheep
should be based on forages encompassing a variety of complementary nutritional values and containing moderate
levels of complementary plant secondary metabolites, until recently regarded as "anti-nutritional". In lactating
sheep, pastures of tannin-containing legumes like sulla (Hedysarum coronarium) and chicory (Cichorium intybus)
can be integrated with annual grasses for establishing sustainable artificial pastures under rainfed conditions.
Diets based on these forages, while ensuring high milking performance, can mitigate the unbalance of CP to energy
ratio of grazing sheep. By grazing sulla and annual or Italian ryegrass (50:50 by area) as spatially conterminal
monocultures or in timely sequence (complementary grazing) sheep eat more and perform better than by grazing
the ryegrass pasture only. Concentrate supplementation of lactating sheep should be preferably based on fibrous
sources (soyhulls or beet pulps), particularly from mid-lactation onwards and when supplementation levels are
high. Milk urea concentration is confirmedly a useful monitoring tool to balance protein nutrition and curb the
waste of N at animal and system level