Elsevier

Journal of Dairy Science

Volume 91, Issue 9, September 2008, Pages 3403-3411
Journal of Dairy Science

Article
Changes in Alveolar and Cisternal Compartments Induced by Milking Interval in the Udder of Dairy Ewes

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Abstract

The aim of this work was to evaluate the effects of milking interval (4, 8, 12, 16, 20, and 24 h) on cisternal size and milk partitioning (cisternal and alveolar) in the udders of dairy ewes. Twenty-four dairy ewes (Manchega, n = 12; Lacaune, n = 12) were used in a 2-wk experiment during mid-lactation. Cisternal and alveolar milk yields were measured and milk samples from each udder fraction were collected for analysis. Cisternal milk was obtained after i.v. injection of an oxytocin receptor antagonist, and alveolar milk was obtained after i.v. injection of oxytocin. Enlargement of the cisternal compartment due to milking intervals was measured by ultrasonography for each half udder. Volumes of cisternal and alveolar milk differed according to breed, being greater in Lacaune (888 ± 43 and 338 ± 25 mL, respectively) than in Manchega ewes (316 ± 43 and 218 ± 25 mL, respectively). Alveolar milk increased linearly to 16 h in Manchega and 20 h in Lacaune and remained constant thereafter. Cisternal milk accumulated linearly to 24-h milking intervals in both breeds. Cisternal area (values per udder half) increased as milking interval increased, reaching a plateau at 20 h in Manchega (21 ± 1 cm2) and 16 h in Lacaune (37 ± 1 cm2). Correlation between cisternal area and cisternal milk was the greatest at 8 h (Manchega: r = 0.70 and Lacaune: r = 0.56). Cisternal area correlated with total milk (r = 0.80). Milk fat content varied markedly with milking intervals, increasing in alveolar milk (until 12 h in Manchega, 8.90 ± 0.18%; and 20 h in Lacaune, 8.67 ± 0.19%) and decreasing until 24 h in cisternal milk (5.74 ± 0.29% and 4.85 ± 0.29%, respectively). Milk protein content increased in alveolar milk until 24 h (Manchega, 6.46 ± 0.11%; Lacaune, 5.95 ± 0.11%), but did not vary in cisternal milk. Milk lactose content only decreased at the 24-h milking interval in the cisternal milk of Manchega ewes (4.60 ± 0.04%). In conclusion, our results suggest that cisterns play an important role in accommodating secreted milk during extended milking intervals. Thus, long milking intervals could be a recommended strategy for large-cisterned dairy sheep. Evidence indicates that ultrasonography provides accurate estimations of udder cistern size and could be used as an indicator for selecting large-cisterned dairy ewes.

Key words

ultrasonography
milking frequency
cisternal milk
dairy sheep

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