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Crop and Pasture Science Crop and Pasture Science Society
Plant sciences, sustainable farming systems and food quality
RESEARCH ARTICLE

The animal: options for managing intake

RA Dynes

Australian Journal of Agricultural Research 47(2) 277 - 287
Published: 1996

Abstract

Managing voluntary feed intake of grazing animals is essential to maximise returns and to meet market specifications. Restricting nutrient intake is successfully achieved by controlled grazing management techniques and with feed additive use in intensive feeding systems. Increasing feed intake in the long-term will be a greater challenge to research. There is considerable potential with existing genotypes of sheep to increase intake, because intake appears to be limited by a lack of hunger drive rather than by limitations due to tissue energy transactions or gut load. Increasing voluntary feed intake will be successful if we can increase the hunger drive within the brain. Increasing the hunger drive may be achieved by decreasing the metabolic satiety signal arising from tissue transactions, by reducing the magnitude of the satiety signals arising from the gastrointestinal tract or by modifying neurotransmitters within the brain to enhance the hunger drive.

Keywords: hunger; voluntary feed intake; intake modulation; reticulo-rumen function; central intake regulation

https://doi.org/10.1071/AR9960277

© CSIRO 1996

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