Effects of grain by-products as supplements for stocker cattle grazing bermudagrass
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چکیده
Two experiments were conducted to compare corn, dried distillers’ grains (DDG), and pelleted soybean hulls (SH) as supplements for cattle grazing bermudagrass. In Exp. 1, 66 crossbred steers (306 ± 3.2 kg) were stratified by weight and allotted randomly to six 2.4-ha bermudagrass pastures for a 107-d study. One of three supplement treatments (corn, DDG, or SH) was assigned randomly to each pasture group and was offered at 0.5% (as fed) of body weight. Calves were weighed at 28-d intervals and supplement was adjusted after each weigh period. In Exp. 2, five ruminally cannulated steers grazed bermudagrass pasture and were individually fed supplements (corn, DDG, or SH) at 0.5% of body weight in a 3 x 3 replicated, incomplete Latin-square design with a 14-d adaptation and a 5-d sampling period. In Exp. 1, supplementation with DDG and corn increased (P < 0.04) the average daily gain compared to supplementation with SH (0.89, 0.87, and 0.74 kg for DDG, corn, and SH, respectively). In Exp. 2, in situ dry-matter-disappearance kinetic measures of bermudagrass were not affected by type of supplementation. The potential extent of digestion for DDG (93%) was lower than for corn (97%, P = 0.01) and SH (96%, P = 0.06). Supplementation with corn or DDG at 0.5% of body weight improved the gain of stocker cattle grazing bermudagrass compared to supplementation with SH, but these differences were not explained by differences in bermudagrass degradation kinetics. * Tyler E. Davis is a senior majoring in animal science. † Elizabeth B. Kegley is an associate professor in the Department of Animal Science and is the mentor for the project. § Kenneth P. Coffey is a professor in the Department of Animal Science. ‡ Wayne K. Coblentz is a former associate professor in the Department of Animal Science and is currently located at the USDA Dairy Forage Research Center in Marshfield, Wisc. §§ Robin K. Ogden is a program associate in the Department of Animal Science. ‡‡ Pete Hornsby is a program associate in the Department of Animal Science.
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تاریخ انتشار 2006