Technical factors affecting estimation of nitrogen balance of dairy cattle in climate respiration chambers

ABSTRACT: Nitrogen retention is often overestimated when calculating N balance of dairy cattle. This study determined whether different N analysis methods (Kjeldahl [KJEL] or elemental analysis [EA]) and sample collection and storage protocols when using climate respiration chambers (CRC) affected t...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: K. Nichols, S.J.J. Alferink, T. Zandstra, M.J.W. Heetkamp, J. Dijkstra
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2025-04-01
Series:Journal of Dairy Science
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022030225000803
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1850147451273478144
author K. Nichols
S.J.J. Alferink
T. Zandstra
M.J.W. Heetkamp
J. Dijkstra
author_facet K. Nichols
S.J.J. Alferink
T. Zandstra
M.J.W. Heetkamp
J. Dijkstra
author_sort K. Nichols
collection DOAJ
description ABSTRACT: Nitrogen retention is often overestimated when calculating N balance of dairy cattle. This study determined whether different N analysis methods (Kjeldahl [KJEL] or elemental analysis [EA]) and sample collection and storage protocols when using climate respiration chambers (CRC) affected the estimation of N intake, milk N secretion, manure N excretion, volatile N appearance, and N retention. Twenty-eight Holstein-Friesian cows were housed in CRC for a 4-d measurement period. Nitrogen intake was estimated using individual forages (corn silage and grass silage) and mixtures of forages sampled before or after storage at 4°C. Total N content of forages was the sum of NH3-N content in wet samples and N content in dry samples analyzed by KJEL and EA. Nitrogen content in dry concentrate samples was analyzed by KJEL and EA. Secretion of N in milk was based on N content in wet samples analyzed by KJEL and EA. Manure N excretion was based on the N content of wet manure samples with and without acid preservative analyzed by KJEL and EA. Volatile N consisted of N in condensed water from the CRC heat exchanger analyzed by KJEL, and aerial N. Aerial N was determined using an NH3 sensor or acid trap analyzed by KJEL. Volatile N was quantified during the 4-d measurement period (cow phase), CRC cleaning (cleaning phase), and between CRC cleaning and the next 4-d measurement period (postcleaning phase). Nitrogen content, with and without accounting for NH3-N, was higher in dry silage samples when analyzed using EA compared with KJEL. Nitrogen intake was higher when forages were analyzed by EA but was not affected by forage source (individual forages or forage mixtures pre- or poststorage) or interaction between forage source and N analysis method. Nitrogen analysis method did not affect the N content of milk or manure. Acid addition to manure samples did not affect N content on a wet basis but tended to increase the DM content of manure such that N content on a DM basis was lower in acid-preserved samples. There was no effect of aerial N analysis method (acid trap or NH3 analyzer) and no interaction between volatile N measurement phase and N analysis method on volatile N appearance. Nitrogen retention was lower when samples were analyzed using KJEL compared with EA (19 and 36 g/d, respectively), attributed to the lower N content of forages when analyzed with KJEL. The measurement phase used for estimating volatile N production did not affect N retention. Overall, N analysis method of forages affects the estimation of N intake but may be less important for milk and manure in terms of the effect on N retention. When using CRC to quantify volatile N, an acid trap or NH3 analyzer for aerial N can be used with similar outcomes. Although N analysis by KJEL resulted in lower N retention relative to EA, this may be artificial if KJEL underestimates N content of forages. Overestimation of N retention was not mitigated through the sampling or analytical approaches evaluated in this study.
format Article
id doaj-art-cb4d2b6894ee40eaa4e27bc06fc8a648
institution OA Journals
issn 0022-0302
language English
publishDate 2025-04-01
publisher Elsevier
record_format Article
series Journal of Dairy Science
spelling doaj-art-cb4d2b6894ee40eaa4e27bc06fc8a6482025-08-20T02:27:34ZengElsevierJournal of Dairy Science0022-03022025-04-0110843659367210.3168/jds.2024-25901Technical factors affecting estimation of nitrogen balance of dairy cattle in climate respiration chambersK. Nichols0S.J.J. Alferink1T. Zandstra2M.J.W. Heetkamp3J. Dijkstra4Animal Nutrition Group, Wageningen University and Research, 6700 AH Wageningen, the Netherlands; Corresponding authorAnimal Nutrition Group, Wageningen University and Research, 6700 AH Wageningen, the NetherlandsAnimal Nutrition Group, Wageningen University and Research, 6700 AH Wageningen, the NetherlandsResearch Facility CARUS, Wageningen University and Research, 6700 AH Wageningen, the NetherlandsAnimal Nutrition Group, Wageningen University and Research, 6700 AH Wageningen, the NetherlandsABSTRACT: Nitrogen retention is often overestimated when calculating N balance of dairy cattle. This study determined whether different N analysis methods (Kjeldahl [KJEL] or elemental analysis [EA]) and sample collection and storage protocols when using climate respiration chambers (CRC) affected the estimation of N intake, milk N secretion, manure N excretion, volatile N appearance, and N retention. Twenty-eight Holstein-Friesian cows were housed in CRC for a 4-d measurement period. Nitrogen intake was estimated using individual forages (corn silage and grass silage) and mixtures of forages sampled before or after storage at 4°C. Total N content of forages was the sum of NH3-N content in wet samples and N content in dry samples analyzed by KJEL and EA. Nitrogen content in dry concentrate samples was analyzed by KJEL and EA. Secretion of N in milk was based on N content in wet samples analyzed by KJEL and EA. Manure N excretion was based on the N content of wet manure samples with and without acid preservative analyzed by KJEL and EA. Volatile N consisted of N in condensed water from the CRC heat exchanger analyzed by KJEL, and aerial N. Aerial N was determined using an NH3 sensor or acid trap analyzed by KJEL. Volatile N was quantified during the 4-d measurement period (cow phase), CRC cleaning (cleaning phase), and between CRC cleaning and the next 4-d measurement period (postcleaning phase). Nitrogen content, with and without accounting for NH3-N, was higher in dry silage samples when analyzed using EA compared with KJEL. Nitrogen intake was higher when forages were analyzed by EA but was not affected by forage source (individual forages or forage mixtures pre- or poststorage) or interaction between forage source and N analysis method. Nitrogen analysis method did not affect the N content of milk or manure. Acid addition to manure samples did not affect N content on a wet basis but tended to increase the DM content of manure such that N content on a DM basis was lower in acid-preserved samples. There was no effect of aerial N analysis method (acid trap or NH3 analyzer) and no interaction between volatile N measurement phase and N analysis method on volatile N appearance. Nitrogen retention was lower when samples were analyzed using KJEL compared with EA (19 and 36 g/d, respectively), attributed to the lower N content of forages when analyzed with KJEL. The measurement phase used for estimating volatile N production did not affect N retention. Overall, N analysis method of forages affects the estimation of N intake but may be less important for milk and manure in terms of the effect on N retention. When using CRC to quantify volatile N, an acid trap or NH3 analyzer for aerial N can be used with similar outcomes. Although N analysis by KJEL resulted in lower N retention relative to EA, this may be artificial if KJEL underestimates N content of forages. Overestimation of N retention was not mitigated through the sampling or analytical approaches evaluated in this study.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022030225000803nitrogen retentionKjeldahlDumascombustionammonia
spellingShingle K. Nichols
S.J.J. Alferink
T. Zandstra
M.J.W. Heetkamp
J. Dijkstra
Technical factors affecting estimation of nitrogen balance of dairy cattle in climate respiration chambers
Journal of Dairy Science
nitrogen retention
Kjeldahl
Dumas
combustion
ammonia
title Technical factors affecting estimation of nitrogen balance of dairy cattle in climate respiration chambers
title_full Technical factors affecting estimation of nitrogen balance of dairy cattle in climate respiration chambers
title_fullStr Technical factors affecting estimation of nitrogen balance of dairy cattle in climate respiration chambers
title_full_unstemmed Technical factors affecting estimation of nitrogen balance of dairy cattle in climate respiration chambers
title_short Technical factors affecting estimation of nitrogen balance of dairy cattle in climate respiration chambers
title_sort technical factors affecting estimation of nitrogen balance of dairy cattle in climate respiration chambers
topic nitrogen retention
Kjeldahl
Dumas
combustion
ammonia
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022030225000803
work_keys_str_mv AT knichols technicalfactorsaffectingestimationofnitrogenbalanceofdairycattleinclimaterespirationchambers
AT sjjalferink technicalfactorsaffectingestimationofnitrogenbalanceofdairycattleinclimaterespirationchambers
AT tzandstra technicalfactorsaffectingestimationofnitrogenbalanceofdairycattleinclimaterespirationchambers
AT mjwheetkamp technicalfactorsaffectingestimationofnitrogenbalanceofdairycattleinclimaterespirationchambers
AT jdijkstra technicalfactorsaffectingestimationofnitrogenbalanceofdairycattleinclimaterespirationchambers