J. Anim Sci.
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J. Anim Sci. 1984. 59:197-203.
© 1984 American Society of Animal Science

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Labile Magnesium Reserves in Beef Cows Subjected to Different Prepasture Supplementation Regimens1

R. J. Ritter, J. A. Boling and N. Gay

University of Kentucky2, Lexington 40546

Abstract

Thirty pregnant beef cows were utilized to determine the effects of winter Mg supplementation regimen on blood minerals after cows were turned to a spring tetanigenic tall fescue pasture. The winter Mg treatments were (1) tall fescue hay with free access to a Mg-deficient salt-mineral mix, (2) 6.4 kg of corn silage dry matter plus 114 g Mg0/d and (3) tall fescue hay with free access to a salt-mineral mix containing 40% Mg0 from January 1 to February 15. All cows were then placed on the same tetanigenic pasture from February 15 to April 17 with free access to a Mg-deficient salt-mineral supplement. Forage Mg remained below .2% during the experiment. Forage Ca, P and Al changed throughout the spring, attaining maximum values of .35%, .46% and 415 ppm, respectively. Forage N and K also increased throughout the spring, reaching values of 3.5 and 3.8%, respectively, at the April 3 sampling. The forage K:(Ca + Mg) ratio approached 2.2 by March 26, which coincided closely with the average tetany date (March 29). Serum Mg averaged 1.97, 3.58 and 2.06 mg/dl for treatments 1, 2 and 3, respectively, on February 15 before turning cows to pasture. There were no treatment differences for serum Ca, P and K during the experiment. Eight cows exhibited symptoms of grass tetany (collapse) on an average date of March 29. Winter Mg supplementation provided little long-term protection against Hypomagnesemia after turning cows to tetanigenic pasture, indicating that cows must have a supplemental source of Mg during this critical period.


Footnotes

1 This paper (No. 81-5-178) is published with the approval of the Director of the Kentucky Agr. Exp. Sta.

2 Dept. of Anim. Sci.







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