1,721,042 research outputs found

    La produzione di latte di asina in una innovativa filiera latte per consumatori di fascia sensibile

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    Il latte di asina ha destato negli ultimi anni un notevole interesse scientifico in quanto è risultato ben tollerato da bambini affetti da allergia alle proteine del latte vaccino ed il suo uso può essere indicato per la prevenzione dell’aterosclerosi. Il presente articolo riassume i risultati scientifici pubblicati in letteratura circa la produzione e le caratteristiche di composizione del latte di asina, evidenziando le similitudini e le differenze rispetto al latte umano e vaccino, anche da un punto di vista igienicosanitario. Il latte, alimento di elezione per la crescita neonatale, non è solo una fonte di antigeni alimentari ma è anche vettore di componenti nutraceutiche. Tra queste, nel latte di asina sono stati determinati alcuni peptidi dotati di attività umano simile, di notevole interesse scientifico. Nel richiamare l’importanza della nutrizione per i suoi effetti sulla produzione di latte e sullo stato di benessere delle asine, il presente articolo esamina alcune caratteristiche dietetiche di fondamentale importanza per il monogastrico erbivoro. La diffusione, attualmente in corso, dell’allevamento asinino per la produzione di latte da destinare a lattanti, anziani o soggetti allergici può contribuire alla rivitalizzazione di microeconomie nelle aree marginali e collinari, con positivi risvolti in termini di salvaguardia del territorio e della biodiversità animale

    Environmental impacts of a dairy cheese chain including whey feeding: An Italian case study

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    The dairy industry is associated with the production of wastewaters and effluents that could have a significant environmental impact because of their pollutant characteristics. Cheese whey is an important source of pollution that needs an appropriate treatment because of several environmental burdens. Thanks to its nutritional value, liquid whey can be successfully recycled in animal nutrition. Following the LCA methodology, this study aims to contribute to the literature on the environmental sustainability of cheese production in a traditional dairy chain, based on an Italian case study and on liquid whey usage. The environmental assessment considers both the milk and the mozzarella cheese production. Three dairy chains and cow diets were assessed and compared: the A diet, with traditional feeding hay and no liquid whey; the B diet, with silages but no liquid whey; the C diet, including both silages and liquid whey. A physical allocation method was used to share the environmental burden between milk and meat at farm level, while the environmental burden of the mozzarella cheese production was totally allocated to curd. A sensitivity analysis based on the cereal unit allocation method was performed. A further sensitivity analysis was performed to compare what the effect would have been considering the variability of milk yield observed in the three diets. Results showed that raw milk production was the most impactful phase along the considered supply chain. Compared with other dairy chains, the C chain with liquid whey recycling did not result the lowest impacting solution at a global environmental perspective, showing best performances on some impacts, but not on others. However, sensitivity analysis testing for the observed yield variability showed that the C diet with whey usage could represent the best option among the different diets

    Leptin in milk and plasma of dairy asses

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    ABSTRACT - Milk and plasma leptin levels have been studied in dairy asses machine milked according to two different routines: 20 pregnant, pluriparous asses, were divided into two groups subjected, every 28 d for 150 d, to two consecutive milkings carried out at different intervals, i.e. 20 vs. 4 hours interval, respectively for group A and group B. During the study, the declining total milk obtained by machine milking was unaffected by the different milking strategies; body condition score of asses as well did not vary between the groups. Different milking intervals did not significantly influence skimmed milk leptin content neither plasma leptin level. Moreover, we did not find significant variation in plasma leptin neither correlation with BCS, indicating that in donkey pregnancy inhibits the cross talk between hypothalamus and adipose tissue

    Carbon footprint of intensive vs. extensive dairy farming in Gargano area

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    Carbon footprint is an indicator of environmental sustainability quantifying the greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions generated by the individual or collective activities. Two dairy farms located in Foggia province (CaseStudy1, CS1; CaseStudy2, CS2) both raising Mediterranean buffaloes (B) and crossbred Italian Friesian cows (C) with different management systems (intensive vs. extensive) were studied to investigate the impacts of milk production. Data about herd characteristics (live weights, mortality, fertility, production), diets composition, and manure management of dairy buffaloes (n = 136 vs. n = 78, CS1B and CS2B respectively) and dairy cows (n = 44 vs. n = 31, CS1C and CS2C respectively) were collected to evaluate the GHG emissions on a year basis according to FAO assessment model (GLEAM-i ver 1.9, https://www.fao.org/gleam/resources/en/). Considering the global warming potential (GWP) of buffalo farms, the more extensive system in CS2B was found less impactful than the intensive CS1B, showing −33.7% of total GHG emissions (expressed as kg CO2-eq/year) and −50.8% of total CH4 (expressed as kg CH4/year). Both feed intake (kg DM/year) and milk production (kg/year) were lower in CS2B (−48.3% and −52.7 % respectively), so that it resulted more impactful (+42.5%) when milk emission intensity (kg CO2-eq/kg protein) was considered. The total N2O emission (kg N2O/year) was +56.7% in CS2B due to the different manure management. Regarding the dairy cow farms, CS2C was found less impactful in terms of both total GHG and CH4 (−21.1% and −37.5% respectively) emissions. Feed intake and milk production were lower in CS2C (−32.4% and −36.9% respectively), resulting the milk emission intensity higher (+25.8%) than in CS1C. Consistently with emissions in buffalo farms, the total N2O emission was higher (+56.6%) in the extensive system. Data processing suggested that GHG emissions were closely related to feed production practices, diet composition and manure management in the different farms. On this regard, formulating diets that match the nutritional animal requirements, improving feed digestibility and availability, introducing alternative protein source or by-product, and implementing manure and animal waste processing, could allow a more sustainable use of natural resources, limiting the potential negative environmental impacts while preserving farm remunerability
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