Effects of mineral content of bovine drinking water: Does iron content affect milk quality?

Implications of water chemistry on milk synthesis are not well described yet water is an important nutrient for dairy cattle. High mineral concentrations (>0.3 mg/kg Fe and others) may be associated with natural levels in ground water, contaminating sources, drought conditions, or storage systems...

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Main Author: Mann, Georgianna Rhodes
Other Authors: Food Science and Technology
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2013
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/22018
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-220182020-09-29T05:43:53Z Effects of mineral content of bovine drinking water: Does iron content affect milk quality? Mann, Georgianna Rhodes Food Science and Technology Duncan, Susan E. Knowlton, Katharine F. O'Keefe, Sean F. Dietrich, Andrea M. milk oxidation sensory iron dairy Implications of water chemistry on milk synthesis are not well described yet water is an important nutrient for dairy cattle. High mineral concentrations (>0.3 mg/kg Fe and others) may be associated with natural levels in ground water, contaminating sources, drought conditions, or storage systems. This study evaluated effects of added iron in bovine drinking water on milk composition (Ca, Cu, Fe, P) measured by inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry and oxidative stability measured by thiobarbituric acid reactive substances assay for malondialdehyde (MDA), volatile chemistry and sensory analysis (triangle test). Prepared ferrous lactate treatments, corresponding to 0, 2, 5, and 12.5 mg/kg drinking water levels were given abomasally (10 L/d) to 4 lactating dairy cows over 4 periods (1 wk infusion/period) in a Latin square design. Milk was collected (d6 of infusion), processed (homogenized, pasteurized), and analyzed within 72 h of processing and 7 d of refrigerated storage. No differences in MDA (1.46�0.04 mg/kg) or iron (0.22�0.01 mg/kg) were observed in processed milk. Cross effects analysis (treatment*cow) showed significant differences in calcium, copper and iron (P < 0.05). Sensory differences (P < 0.05), in treatment vs. control, suggested iron from water sources contributes to milk flavor changes. A case study with high and low (0.99; 0.014 mg/kg) iron treatments revealed no significant differences (P > 0.05) in mineral composition (0.23�0.06 mg/kg Fe) or MDA (0.77�0.03 mg/kg) of raw milk. Iron added to milk causes changes in oxidation; high levels of iron in bovine drinking water may not have observed effects. Master of Science in Life Sciences 2013-05-07T08:00:32Z 2013-05-07T08:00:32Z 2013-05-06 Thesis vt_gsexam:475 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/22018 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ ETD application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic milk
oxidation
sensory
iron
dairy
spellingShingle milk
oxidation
sensory
iron
dairy
Mann, Georgianna Rhodes
Effects of mineral content of bovine drinking water: Does iron content affect milk quality?
description Implications of water chemistry on milk synthesis are not well described yet water is an important nutrient for dairy cattle. High mineral concentrations (>0.3 mg/kg Fe and others) may be associated with natural levels in ground water, contaminating sources, drought conditions, or storage systems. This study evaluated effects of added iron in bovine drinking water on milk composition (Ca, Cu, Fe, P) measured by inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry and oxidative stability measured by thiobarbituric acid reactive substances assay for malondialdehyde (MDA), volatile chemistry and sensory analysis (triangle test). Prepared ferrous lactate treatments, corresponding to 0, 2, 5, and 12.5 mg/kg drinking water levels were given abomasally (10 L/d) to 4 lactating dairy cows over 4 periods (1 wk infusion/period) in a Latin square design. Milk was collected (d6 of infusion), processed (homogenized, pasteurized), and analyzed within 72 h of processing and 7 d of refrigerated storage. No differences in MDA (1.46�0.04 mg/kg) or iron (0.22�0.01 mg/kg) were observed in processed milk. Cross effects analysis (treatment*cow) showed significant differences in calcium, copper and iron (P < 0.05). Sensory differences (P < 0.05), in treatment vs. control, suggested iron from water sources contributes to milk flavor changes. A case study with high and low (0.99; 0.014 mg/kg) iron treatments revealed no significant differences (P > 0.05) in mineral composition (0.23�0.06 mg/kg Fe) or MDA (0.77�0.03 mg/kg) of raw milk. Iron added to milk causes changes in oxidation; high levels of iron in bovine drinking water may not have observed effects. === Master of Science in Life Sciences
author2 Food Science and Technology
author_facet Food Science and Technology
Mann, Georgianna Rhodes
author Mann, Georgianna Rhodes
author_sort Mann, Georgianna Rhodes
title Effects of mineral content of bovine drinking water: Does iron content affect milk quality?
title_short Effects of mineral content of bovine drinking water: Does iron content affect milk quality?
title_full Effects of mineral content of bovine drinking water: Does iron content affect milk quality?
title_fullStr Effects of mineral content of bovine drinking water: Does iron content affect milk quality?
title_full_unstemmed Effects of mineral content of bovine drinking water: Does iron content affect milk quality?
title_sort effects of mineral content of bovine drinking water: does iron content affect milk quality?
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/22018
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