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Variation in the Composition of Milk of Asian Elephants (Elephas maximus) Throughout Lactation
Authors:Frances N. Abbondanza  Michael L. Power  Melissa A. Dickson  Janine Brown  Olav T. Oftedal
Affiliation:1. Department of Center for Species Survival, Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute, , Front Royal, Virginia;2. Nutrition Laboratory,, Conservation Ecology Center, Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute, National Zoological Park, , Washington, District of Columbia;3. Research Department, American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, , Washington, District of Columbia;4. Dickerson Park Zoo, , Springfield, Missouri;5. Smithsonian Environmental Research Center, , Edgewater, Maryland
Abstract:We investigated milk nutrient composition from three Asian elephant cows over the first 3 years of lactation, including two consecutive lactations in one cow. Body mass gain is presented for three calves during the first year. Milk samples (n = 74) were analyzed for dry matter (DM), fat, crude protein (CP), sugar, ash, calcium (Ca), phosphorus (P), and potassium (K); gross energy (GE) was calculated. Concentrations of most nutrients changed over lactation: DM, fat, CP, Ca, P, and GE were positively correlated to calf age; sugar was negatively correlated to calf age. GE doubled between birth (1 kcal/g) and 2 years of age (2 kcal/g). After accounting for calf age, GE, fat, Ca, and P concentrations differed among the cows. Milk composition also differed between two lactations from the same cow. When milk nutrients were expressed on a mg per kcal basis, the pattern changes: CP, Ca, and P remained relatively constant over lactation on a per energy basis. Calf mass quadrupled over the first year of life; mass gain was linear at 0.9 kg/day. Asian elephant milk composition is variable, both across lactations and between cows, complicating efforts to determine representative values for comparative studies and for the formulation of elephant milk formulas. The fact that CP, Ca, and P were all relatively constant when expressed on a per energy basis may be of biological significance. The increase in nutrient density over lactation undoubtedly limits maternal water loss, reducing the volume of milk necessary to support the calf. Zoo Biol 32:291–298, 2013. © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
Keywords:lactation  milk constituents  milk replacers
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