Title: Forage Utilization and Dairy Nutrition Update
1Forage Utilization and Dairy Nutrition Update
2Current Situation
- Drought reduced forage supplies in some areas of
the state and nation. - Short supply of hay
- Shorter supply of quality hay
- Increased cost for purchased hay
- Winter annuals for grazing
- Temperature
- Rainfall
3Current Situation
- Corn prices have increases considerably, will
remain high for the foreseeable future because of
increased demand for ethanol production.
??
4 Current Situation
- Milk prices have started to increase and should
be 1.00/cwt higher for 2007, but low milk
prices have many producers behind financially!
5Forage is the foundation of diets for lactating
dairy cows!
6High quality forage
- As forage quality increases, the proportion of
forage used in the diet increases - Reduces amount of purchased feed required to
balance nutrient deficiencies - Easier to actually achieve desired milk yield
- Maintains rumen health
- Improved IOFC
7NDF Digestibility
- Increasing NDF digestibility reduces fill and
increases passage rates which allows higher dry
matter intake. - 1 unit increase in NDF digestibility
- 0.37 lbs DMI
- 0.50 lbs milk yield
- 0.55 lbs 4 FCM
Oba and Allen. 1999. JDS 82589-596.
8Interpreting 30 Hour Forage In vitro NDF
Digestibility
Sniffen and Emerich, 1999
9Challenges
- Climate in the SE makes producing high quality
forage more challenging - Hot and humid
- More constant day length
- Higher fiber and lignin concentrations
- Lower digestibility
- Warm season forages are less digestible than cool
season forages
10What makes good corn silage?
- High yield
- High energy content (digestibility)
- High intake potential (low fiber content)
- Proper moisture at harvest for storage
- Minimum nutrient losses from harvest until feeding
11Managing Corn for Silage
- Hybrid selection
- Maturity class
- Disease resistance
- Insect resistance
- Yield potential
- Digestibility
- Manage for yield AND quality
- Population
- Planting date
- Row spacing
- Soil fertility
- Weed control
- Irrigation
- Harvest
- Stage of maturity
- Cutting height
- Chop length
- Special situations
- Ensiling
- Inoculants to ensure fermentation
- Packing rate and extent
- Sealing
- Feeding Management
- Removal rate
- Face management
12Corn silagebalance of stover and grain
- Stover
- digestible fiber
- slowly fermented
- Grain
- Starch
- Rapidly fermented
13Corn Hybrids
- Temperate
- Tropical
- Specialty
- High oil
- High lysine
- Waxy
- Leafy
- Brown midrib
14Corn Specialty Hybrid Silage Yield and Quality
During 1990-1999 in Wisconsin (Normalized data)
22000
High
High
yield
yield
20000
quality
18000
Milk per Acre (lb/A)
16000
14000
High
quality
12000
1900
2100
2300
Milk per Ton (lb/T)
15Factors to consider whenselecting a corn hybrid
- Maturity class
- Silage yield and quality
- Grain yield
- Drought tolerance
- Disease resistance
- Insect resistance
16Timely Harvest
17Brown midrib mutation (BMR)
- Natural mutation of corn
- Lower lignin concentrations
- Higher fiber digestibility
- Lower DM yield
- Higher seed cost
18Chemical composition
19Production Response
20BMR and dietary NDF content
Oba and Allen. 2000. JDS 831333-1341.
21BMR and dietary NDF content
Oba and Allen. 2000. JDS 831333-1341.
22BMR Corn Silage
- Higher DMI
- Greater ruminal NDF digestibility
- Faster ruminal turnover or passage rate
- Starch digestibility tends to be higher lower
tract digestibility, but total digestibility is
not changed - Improved microbial protein synthesis
- Improved nutrient intake and flow provides
additional nutrients to support higher milk yield
23Tifton 85 Bermudagrass for lactating dairy cows
Coastal released in 1943 Tifton 85 in 1993
24Why Tifton 85 bermudagrass?
- Naturally adapted to soils and environment
- Efficiently utilizes N-P-K from dairy waste
- Very good yield and quality with improved
cultivars - Lower production cost than other forages
25Relative Yield and In Vitro Dry Matter
Digestibility (IVDMD)
Burton, 1999
26Delayed harvest increases DM yield
27Nutrient digestibility decreases greatly with
delayed harvest
28Performance of lactating dairy cows fed Tifton 85
or Alfalfa hay
West et al., 1997. JDS. 801656-1665.
29Tifton 85 bermudagrass versus alfalfa hay
West et al. 1997. J. Dairy Sci.
801656-1665. 13.5 blend price of 17.00
30Tifton 85 haylage vs. Alfalfa hay
Spring 2006
31Feeding considerations
- Compared to other forages, bermudagrass has
higher NDF concentrations. - The NDF in Tifton 85 bermudagrass is more
digestible than alfalfa, but passage rate is
slower. - High fiber concentrations can limit intake if
large amounts are included in the diet
32Summary
- Plant improved cultivars like Tifton 85 that have
higher fiber digestibility. - Harvest bermudagrass for optimum quality at 3-4
wk re-growth, not yield. - Formulate rations to optimize intake and optimize
digestibility - 30 of DM from bermudagrass
- NDF 40 of DM
- Adequate fermentable CHO to optimize fermentation
33Grazing Dairies
- Renewed interest in grazing in the SE
- Total grazing vs. supplemental grazing or a
combination of the two
34Grazing Dairies
- There are successful grazing dairies in the SE,
but they require above average management - Challenges
- Developing a suitable forage system
- Managing the forage system
- Supplementation strategy
- Heat stress abatement
35Forage System for Grazing
- Must be able to withstand grazing pressure in
this environment (soils and climatic) - Must provide adequate amounts of high quality
forage - Supplementation strategy
- Forage
- Grain
36Supplemental Cooling on Pasture
- Essential if we expect cows to graze and maintain
milk production without loosing excessive body
weight - Sprinkler system on pivot
- Cooling ponds
- Remember there is no compensatory milk yield
once milk production drops it will not rebound
until that cow freshens again.
37Dealing with higher feed cost
- Corn (feed) prices have increased sharply
- Drought has reduced hay availability and
increased cost - How do we adjust feeding programs short and long
term?
38Potential Corn Replacements
- Hominy feed
- Bakery waste
- Citrus pulp
- Soybean hulls
- Wheat middling
- Molasses
- Fat
- Distillers grains
- Corn gluten feed
- Wet brewers grains
39Considerations when replacing corn
- Forage base and quality
- Protein characteristics of the diet
- Total amount of fat and sources
- Carbohydrate balance
- Structural vs NFC
- Low starch diets
40.. . . . .
Questions