In Vivo Evaluation of Brown-Midrib Corn Silage by Sheep and Lactating Dairy Cows

27Citations
Citations of this article
12Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

Brown-midrib (bm3) corn silage was compared with normal genetic corn silage after ensiling. Analytical contents for dry matter, crude protein, nitrogen-free extract, ether extract, crude fiber, acid detergent fiber, and ash were similar, but acid detergent fiber and lignin was reduced in brown-midrib silage. Wethers fed brown-midrib silage consumed 1.36 kg dry matter per day compared to 1.15 when fed normal control silage. Apparent digestibility of dry matter (70.9 versus 64.3%) and acid detergent fiber (61.8 versus 46.8%) were greater for wethers fed brown-midrib silage. Apparent nitrogen digestibility was not different (59.7 versus 60.6%);however, nitrogen absorbed was greater when wethers were fed brown-midrib silage (15.0 versus 13.4 g/day). In a single reversal lactation trial, 20 cows consumed more silage dry matter when offered brown-midrib silage ad libitum than when control silage was fed (8.7 versus 8.1 kg/day), but total dry matter intake was not different (17.6 versus 17.1 kg/day). Milk production (actual or 4% fat-corrected) was not different. Body weight change (kg/day) was .19 during feeding of brown-midrib and .11 during feeding of normal silage. Even though brown-midrib silage was more palatable and digestible in sheep, there was no difference in milk production when it was fed to cows averaging 109 days postpartum in a switch-over trial of 100 days. © 1982, American Dairy Science Association. All rights reserved.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Stallings, C. C., Donaldson, B. M., Thomas, J. W., & Rossman, E. C. (1982). In Vivo Evaluation of Brown-Midrib Corn Silage by Sheep and Lactating Dairy Cows. Journal of Dairy Science, 65(10), 1945–1949. https://doi.org/10.3168/jds.S0022-0302(82)82443-0

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free