Effects of Organic Selenium and Probiotic Supplementation on the Performance of Indigenous and Crossbred Dairy Cows during Summer in the Tropics

Author:

Kumar Kaushalendra1ORCID,Sinha Ravi Ranjan Kumar2,Singh Pankaj Kumar1ORCID,Kishor Amrendra2,Kumar Pramod3,Chauhan Surinder Singh4ORCID,Kumar Ravindra5

Affiliation:

1. Department of Animal Nutrition, Bihar Veterinary College, Bihar Animal Sciences University, Patna 800014, India

2. Department of Livestock Production and Management, Bihar Veterinary College, Bihar Animal Sciences University, Patna 800014, India

3. Department of Veterinary Physiology, Bihar Veterinary College, Bihar Animal Sciences University, Patna 800014, India

4. School of Agriculture and Food, Faculty of Science, Dookie Campus, Dookie College, The University of Melbourne, Dookie, VIC 3647, Australia

5. Department of Veterinary Physiology & Biochemistry, College of Veterinary and Animal Science, Chaudhary Sarwan Kumar Himachal Pradesh Krishi Vishvavidyalaya (CSKHPKV), Palampur 176062, India

Abstract

The aim of the present study was to establish the influence of organic selenium and a yeast, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, in combination on animal performance, physiological status, milk production and blood metabolites in indigenous and crossbred dairy cows during hot-humid climatic conditions in tropics. A total of 18 indigenous dairy cows and 18 crossbred dairy cows were divided into two groups(control and treatment) containing 9 cows each based on parity and milk yield for a period of 45 days. The control group were fed on a basal diet comprising a concentrate mix, wheat straw, and multi-cut sorghum greens, while the treatment group were offered basal rations supplemented with organic selenium (4 g/d) along with Saccharomyces cerevisiae (1010 CFU/g; 4 g/d). There were no significant changes found in feed intake, body weight and animal physiology; however, better feed efficiency was recorded in both of the treatment groups, irrespective of breed variation. There was a non-significant increase in milk yield recorded in both treatment groups in comparison with the control. Similarly, no significant effects were observed on the haemato-biochemical profile in both animal types. Hence, it can be concluded that the supplementation of organic selenium and probiotics in combination to indigenous and crossbred dairy cattle moderately improved feed efficiency and overall performance without affecting metabolic status under heat stress conditions in the tropics.

Funder

Australia-India Council Grants

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Medicine

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