Using Milk Urea Nitrogen to Evaluate Diet Formulation and Environmental Impact on Dairy Farms

Reducing nitrogen (N) excretion by dairy cattle is the most effective means to reduce N losses (runoff, volatilization, and leaching) from dairy farms. The objectives of this review are to examine the use of milk urea nitrogen (MUN) to measure N excretion and utilization efficiency in lactating dair...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: J.S. Jonker, R.A. Kohn
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2001-01-01
Series:The Scientific World Journal
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1100/tsw.2001.265
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1832560748481478656
author J.S. Jonker
R.A. Kohn
author_facet J.S. Jonker
R.A. Kohn
author_sort J.S. Jonker
collection DOAJ
description Reducing nitrogen (N) excretion by dairy cattle is the most effective means to reduce N losses (runoff, volatilization, and leaching) from dairy farms. The objectives of this review are to examine the use of milk urea nitrogen (MUN) to measure N excretion and utilization efficiency in lactating dairy cows and to examine impacts of overfeeding N to dairy cows in the Chesapeake Bay drainage basin. A mathematical model was developed and evaluated with an independent literature data set to integrate MUN and milk composition to predict urinary and fecal excretion, intake, and utilization efficiency for N in lactating dairy cows. This model was subsequently used to develop target MUN concentrations for lactating dairy cattle fed according to National Research Council (NRC) recommendations. Target values calculated in this manner were 8 to 14 mg/dl for a typical lactation and were most sensitive to change in milk production and crude protein intake. Routine use of MUN to monitor dairy cattle diets was introduced to dairy farms (n = 1156) in the Chesapeake Bay watershed. Participating farmers (n = 454) were provided with the results of their MUN analyses and interpretive information monthly for a period of 6 months. The average MUN across all farms in the study increased in the spring, but the increase was 0.52 mg/dl lower for farmers receiving MUN results compared to those who did not participate in the program. This change indicated that participating farmers reduced N feeding compared to nonparticipants. Average efficiency of feed N utilization (N in milk / N in feed x 100) was 24.5% (SD = 4.5). On average, farmers fed 6.6% more N than recommended by the NRC, resulting in a 16% increase in urinary N and a 2.7% increase in fecal N compared to feeding to requirement. N loading to the Chesapeake Bay from overfeeding protein to lactating dairy cattle was estimated to be 7.6 million kg/year. MUN is a useful tool to measure diet adequacy and environmental impact from dairy farms.
format Article
id doaj-art-97c1ae6cc21c4100886ec2743f5c0b71
institution Kabale University
issn 1537-744X
language English
publishDate 2001-01-01
publisher Wiley
record_format Article
series The Scientific World Journal
spelling doaj-art-97c1ae6cc21c4100886ec2743f5c0b712025-02-03T01:26:44ZengWileyThe Scientific World Journal1537-744X2001-01-01185285910.1100/tsw.2001.265Using Milk Urea Nitrogen to Evaluate Diet Formulation and Environmental Impact on Dairy FarmsJ.S. Jonker0R.A. Kohn1United States Environmental Protection Agency, Washington, DC 20460, USAUnited States Environmental Protection Agency, Washington, DC 20460, USAReducing nitrogen (N) excretion by dairy cattle is the most effective means to reduce N losses (runoff, volatilization, and leaching) from dairy farms. The objectives of this review are to examine the use of milk urea nitrogen (MUN) to measure N excretion and utilization efficiency in lactating dairy cows and to examine impacts of overfeeding N to dairy cows in the Chesapeake Bay drainage basin. A mathematical model was developed and evaluated with an independent literature data set to integrate MUN and milk composition to predict urinary and fecal excretion, intake, and utilization efficiency for N in lactating dairy cows. This model was subsequently used to develop target MUN concentrations for lactating dairy cattle fed according to National Research Council (NRC) recommendations. Target values calculated in this manner were 8 to 14 mg/dl for a typical lactation and were most sensitive to change in milk production and crude protein intake. Routine use of MUN to monitor dairy cattle diets was introduced to dairy farms (n = 1156) in the Chesapeake Bay watershed. Participating farmers (n = 454) were provided with the results of their MUN analyses and interpretive information monthly for a period of 6 months. The average MUN across all farms in the study increased in the spring, but the increase was 0.52 mg/dl lower for farmers receiving MUN results compared to those who did not participate in the program. This change indicated that participating farmers reduced N feeding compared to nonparticipants. Average efficiency of feed N utilization (N in milk / N in feed x 100) was 24.5% (SD = 4.5). On average, farmers fed 6.6% more N than recommended by the NRC, resulting in a 16% increase in urinary N and a 2.7% increase in fecal N compared to feeding to requirement. N loading to the Chesapeake Bay from overfeeding protein to lactating dairy cattle was estimated to be 7.6 million kg/year. MUN is a useful tool to measure diet adequacy and environmental impact from dairy farms.http://dx.doi.org/10.1100/tsw.2001.265
spellingShingle J.S. Jonker
R.A. Kohn
Using Milk Urea Nitrogen to Evaluate Diet Formulation and Environmental Impact on Dairy Farms
The Scientific World Journal
title Using Milk Urea Nitrogen to Evaluate Diet Formulation and Environmental Impact on Dairy Farms
title_full Using Milk Urea Nitrogen to Evaluate Diet Formulation and Environmental Impact on Dairy Farms
title_fullStr Using Milk Urea Nitrogen to Evaluate Diet Formulation and Environmental Impact on Dairy Farms
title_full_unstemmed Using Milk Urea Nitrogen to Evaluate Diet Formulation and Environmental Impact on Dairy Farms
title_short Using Milk Urea Nitrogen to Evaluate Diet Formulation and Environmental Impact on Dairy Farms
title_sort using milk urea nitrogen to evaluate diet formulation and environmental impact on dairy farms
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1100/tsw.2001.265
work_keys_str_mv AT jsjonker usingmilkureanitrogentoevaluatedietformulationandenvironmentalimpactondairyfarms
AT rakohn usingmilkureanitrogentoevaluatedietformulationandenvironmentalimpactondairyfarms