Response to Incremental Replacement of Palm Oil with Fish Oil in Starter Diet on Growth Performance, Plasma Metabolites, Ruminal Fermentation, and Behavior of Dairy Calves
Seyed Hadi Hosseini, Hamidreza Mirzaei-Alamouti, Morteza Mansouryar, Mina Vazirigohar, Pedram Rezamand, Ehsan Mahjoubi, Jafar Ramezankhani, Jörg R. Aschenbach

TL;DR
This study found that replacing palm oil with fish oil in calf starter feed had little effect on growth, metabolism, or behavior of young dairy calves.
Contribution
The study demonstrates that incremental replacement of palm oil with fish oil in calf diets does not significantly impact growth or metabolic performance under normal conditions.
Findings
Calves fed fish oil had slightly higher body weight compared to those fed palm oil or a mix.
Growth rates, feed intake, and rumen fermentation were unaffected by the type of fatty acids in the diet.
Behavioral and blood parameters remained consistent across all dietary treatments.
Abstract
In this study, we aimed to understand how different levels of fatty acids in the starter feed affect the growth and health of milk-fed calves. We divided 30 female calves into three groups and fed them starter feeds supplemented with different fatty acids: palm fatty acids (PO), a mix of palm fatty acids and fish oil (PFO), and fish oil (FO). We found that calves receiving FO had slightly greater body weight over the whole period compared to those receiving PFO or PO. However, overall growth rates and intake of feed remained similar across all groups. Additionally, parameters like body size, rumen fermentation, blood composition, and behavioral patterns were not affected by the type of fatty acids in their diet. Our study suggests that altering the ratio of different unsaturated fatty acids in starter feed may not have a substantial impact on the growth and metabolic performance of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRuminant Nutrition and Digestive Physiology · Fatty Acid Research and Health · Animal Nutrition and Physiology
