J. Anim Sci.
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J. Anim Sci. 2009. 87:2899-2905. doi:10.2527/jas.2009-1828
© 2009 American Society of Animal Science

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RUMINANT NUTRITION

Intake, digestibility, and nitrogen retention by sheep supplemented with warm-season legume haylages or soybean meal

J. L. Foster*, A. T. Adesogan*,1, J. N. Carter{dagger}, A. R. Blount{dagger}, R. O. Myer{dagger} and S. C. Phatak{ddagger}

* Department of Animal Sciences, Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences, University of Florida, Gainesville 32611; and {dagger} North Florida Research and Education Center, Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences, Marianna 32446; and {ddagger} Horticulture Department, University of Georgia, Athens 30602

1 Coresponding author: adesogan{at}ufl.edu

The high cost of commercial supplements necessitates evaluation of alternatives for ruminant livestock fed poor quality warm-season grasses. This study determined how supplementing bahiagrass haylage (Paspalum notatum Flügge cv. Tifton 9) with soybean [Glycine max (L.) Merr.] meal or warm-season legume haylages affected the performance of lambs. Forty-two Dorper x Katadhin lambs (27.5 ± 5 kg) were fed for ad libitum intake of bahiagrass haylage (67.8% NDF, 9.6% CP) alone (control) or supplemented with soybean meal (18.8% NDF, 51.4% CP) or haylages of annual peanut [Arachis hypogaea (L.) cv. Florida MDR98; 39.6% NDF, 18.7% CP], cowpea [Vigna unguiculata (L.) Walp. cv. Iron clay; 44.1% NDF, 16.0% CP], perennial peanut (Arachis glabrata Benth. cv. Florigraze; 40.0% NDF, 15.8% CP), or pigeonpea [Cajanus cajan (L.) Millsp. cv. GA-2; 65.0% NDF, 13.7% CP]. Haylages were harvested at the optimal maturity for maximizing yield and nutritive value, wilted to 45% DM, baled, wrapped in polyethylene plastic, and ensiled for 180 d. Legumes were fed at 50% of the dietary DM, and soybean meal was fed at 8% of the dietary DM to match the average CP concentration (12.8%) of legume haylage-supplemented diets. Lambs were fed each diet for a 14-d adaptation period and a 7-d data collection period. Each diet was fed to 7 lambs in period 1 and 4 lambs in period 2. Pigeonpea haylage supplementation decreased (P < 0.01) DM and OM intake and digestibility vs. controls. Other legume haylages increased (P < 0.05) DM and OM intake vs. controls; however, only soybean meal supplementation increased (P = 0.01) DM digestibility. All supplements decreased (P = 0.05) NDF digestibility. Except for pigeonpea haylage, all supplements increased (P < 0.01) N intake, digestibility, and retention, and the responses were greatest (P = 0.04) with soybean meal supplementation. Microbial N synthesis was reduced (P = 0.02) by pigeonpea haylage supplementation, but unaffected (P = 0.05) by other supplements. Efficiency of microbial protein synthesis was unaffected (P = 0.05) by diet. Ruminal ammonia concentration was increased (P = 0.01) by all supplements, but only soybean meal and annual peanut haylage increased (P < 0.03) plasma urea-N concentrations. Perennial peanut, annual peanut, and cowpea haylages are promising protein supplements for growing lambs.

Key Words: bahiagrass • digestibility • haylage • nitrogen retention • tropical/subtropical legume


Related articles in J. Anim Sci.:

Intake, digestibility, and nitrogen retention by sheep supplemented with warm-season legume hays or soybean meal
J. L. Foster, A. T. Adesogan, J. N. Carter, A. R. Blount, R. O. Myer, and S. C. Phatak
J. Anim Sci. 2009 87: 2891-2898. [Abstract] [Full Text]  






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