Performance and Carcass Data of Steers Finished on Either Ammoniated or Nonammoniated Corn, Grain Sorghum, or Wheat Silage11Approved for publication by the Director of the Louisiana Agric. Exp. Sta. as manuscript no. 97-74-0098

Autor: S.M. Derouen, W.A. Nipper, D.W. Sanson, A.F. Loyacano, T.L. Stanton, D.F. Coombs, R. Lemenager
Rok vydání: 1997
Předmět:
Zdroj: The Professional Animal Scientist. 13:176-181
ISSN: 1080-7446
DOI: 10.15232/s1080-7446(15)31880-5
Popis: Two-hundred eighty-eight steers were used in a 3 × 2 factorial arrangement of treatments to compare the effect of ammoniation of three forages at time of ensiling to similar silages not ammoniated but supplemented with cottonseed meal at feeding. Three trials were conducted over a 3-yr period with 96 steers used per year. In each year, there were eight steers per pen with two pens per simple treatment. Silage sources were corn, grain sorghum, and wheat. The factorial design resulted in six simple treatments: ammoniated corn silage; nonammoniated corn silage plus cottonseed meal; ammoniated grain sorghum silage; nonammoniated grain sorghum silage plus cottonseed meal; ammoniated wheat silage; and nonammoniated wheat silage plus cottonseed meal. Liquid NH 3 was applied at the rate of 3.5 g/kg of fresh silage to the ammoniated silage at the time it was placed in the silo. No silage source by nitrogen source interaction was present ( P >0.05). Steers fed corn silage gained ( P P P P P >0.442) in ADG of steers fed either silage that had been treated with ammonia at ensiling or silage that received cottonseed meal supplementation. Dry matter intake was higher ( P =0.019) for steers that received the silage plus cottonseed meal than steers that received ammoniated silage. Because there was no effect of treatment of N source on gain, but steers fed ammoniated silage consumed less DM, the feed efficiency for steers fed ammoniated silage was increased ( P
Databáze: OpenAIRE