Term
How do bulky feeds affect feed intake? |
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Definition
if indigestible, then gut capacity is filled with less nutrient-dense material |
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Definition
if they are kept indoors yes |
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Definition
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
non-woody broadleaf plants |
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Term
Is corn high in protein? TDN? |
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Definition
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Term
What is the most common carbohydrate in plants? |
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Definition
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Term
What types of nutrients are found in forages? |
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Definition
Nonstructural-storage CHO (starch, fructosans)
Stuctural/cell wall CHO (hemi, cellulose, lignin, pectins NDF)
Lipids Protein Minerals |
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Term
Pectin is a ___ linked polymer |
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Definition
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Term
What concern is there with feeding straw? |
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Definition
very high in NDF low in cell contents rumen can impact, bc cattle will eat a lot of it trying to meet energy requirements but rumen microbes can't digest it, cow will die |
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Term
When might you want to feed straw? Why? |
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Definition
If cattle are being fed a diet high in concentrates |
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Term
Is NDF content constant in forages? |
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Definition
no, changes as plants mature |
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Term
What fatty acids are found in forages primarily? |
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Definition
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Term
Meat from forage-fed rumnants is right in ____ fatty acids |
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Definition
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Term
Why would forage-finished cattle produce meat high in conjugated linoleic acid? |
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Definition
CLA produced from rumen fermentation |
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Term
How does maturity affect N-content of forages? |
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Definition
Location (N is mostly in leaves) Species Quality (high in Lys, Arg, Glu) |
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Term
What AA are often limiting in forages? |
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Definition
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Term
Why does mineral content vary in forages |
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Definition
plant species soil conditions fertilization practices climate |
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Term
What is the most common deficiency in forage-base diets? |
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Definition
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Term
Are legumes and grasses equal in terms of mineral content? |
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Definition
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Term
What effect does forage bleaching have on Vit A, D and E? |
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Definition
D no change or improve A & E will be degraded |
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Term
What vitamins are found in forages? |
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Definition
beta carotene (converted to Vit A) Vit E Vit B (except B12) Vit D |
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Term
What factors affect nutritional value of forages? |
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Definition
NDF content vs cell contents Extent of lignification Maturity (more lignin) Season (will need more pasture per head in winter than spring) |
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Term
What problem might you encounter with feeding early-cut 1st growth hay? |
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Definition
has a low DM content (high in moisture) |
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Term
Pros of feeding first-cut hay? |
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Definition
high in water, CP maximum digestibility leaf:stem ratio (as plants mature get more stem) |
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Term
How does dry matter digestibility and intake change as forages mature? |
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Definition
DMD decreases because there is more NDF DMI increases because of more NDF, less CC |
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Term
What moisture content is appropriate for hay? |
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Definition
15% or less other wise will have mould |
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Term
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Definition
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Why do you want cut forage to dry quickly when making hay? |
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Definition
longer = more potential loss of nutrients (CC are soluble will lose these) and more likely to get rained on |
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Term
Why is handling important when making hay? |
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Definition
rough handling = will lose leaf |
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Term
Why might protein be converted to NPN even after the plant is cut? |
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Definition
plant enzymes (proteinase) will continue to be active until forage is dried down to 60% DM (target is 85) |
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Term
As drying time increases, forage Vit D content... |
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Definition
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Term
If it rains right after cutting, is that a problem? |
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Definition
not really. but if it rains during curing process that's bad |
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Term
what time of day would be best to cut hay? |
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Definition
late afternoon/early evening = retain more sugars in the forage |
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Term
What factors would cause hay to lose quality? |
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Definition
Storage Cutting method Drying time Weather damage Plant enzyme activity |
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Term
How can you tell if heat damage has occurred to hay? |
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Definition
N analysis, if ADF-N or ADIN > 30% of total N then heat damage has occured |
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Term
What can you do to preserve hay? |
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Definition
NaCl (draws water out, not effective) Formic / propionic acids to prevent fungus growth Artificial dehydration |
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Term
Why are the problems with using formic / propionic acids to preserve hay? |
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Definition
antifungal, but uniform application is difficult to achieve |
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Term
Dark hay is likely high in ___ |
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Definition
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Term
Which is the best indicator of digestibility, NDF or ADF? |
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Definition
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Term
What is silage? How does it work? |
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Definition
high moisture forage preserved through anaerobic fermentation
lactobacilli convert CHO to LA, VFA, ethanol pH will eventually drop to point that product is stable, microbes will be killed |
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Term
How does ensilaging affect forage nutritive value? |
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Definition
decreases value but increases bioavailability |
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Term
What are the requirements for making silage? |
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Definition
higher moisture (more for bunker silo vs tower)
need soluble CHO in forage (glucose and fructose) to feed microbes
need to chop crop so forage packs tightly, less room for oxygen = better anerobic fermentation |
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Term
High levels of butyrate in silage indicate.... |
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Definition
low quality, means undesireable microbes are present |
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Term
What bacteria is a concern in silage? |
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Definition
clostridium (causes botulism) listeria (causes abortion) |
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Term
What effect does protein hydrolysis have on silage? |
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Definition
can decrease protein quality, e.g. will take high quality alfalfa protein and break it down |
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Term
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Definition
1. Soluble CHO fermentation (aerobic) -want to stop this asap 2.Soluble CHO fermentation (anaerobic) -prod lactic, formic, VFA 3.Protein hydrolysis -produces NPN 4. Heat production |
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Term
How does silage compare to haylage? |
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Definition
silage has more moisture than haylage |
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Term
Why would we feed silage? |
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Definition
-allows use of whole plant to produce high quality feed -highest energy of all roughages -conserves forage if not dry enough for hay -easy to incorporate into a TMR |
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Term
How does microbial fermentation in silage production differ from rumen microbial fermentation? |
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Definition
Microbes can flow out of the rumen, mechanical mixing in the rumen, inputs/outputs in the rumen are continuous whereas the system is closed in ensilaging process
-microbes will kill themselves in silage process bc pH will eventually get to 4.0 |
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Term
Why would you add Ca to silage? |
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Definition
if you're making a grain silage bc they are low in Ca |
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Term
What are some commonly used silage additives? |
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Definition
-readily fermentable CHO to feed bacteria -bacterial innoculants & enzymes for starch/fiber breakdown -Ca -NH3/urea to enrich end product -acids (minimize compound degradation) |
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Term
What are the pros of making baylage / round bale silage? Cons? |
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Definition
-don't have to wait (gets baled right way) -low capital investment vs a silo
CON -environmental waste of plastic -plastic wrap needs to have high integrity |
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Term
What are the benefits of raising animals on pasture? |
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Definition
lower feed costs less labor better animal health (air quality, calving on pasture is better) |
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Term
What are some methods of grazing managemenet? |
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Definition
Continuous (essentially unmanaged) Rotational Strip grazing (move fence 1-2x a day) Stockpile |
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Term
What is stockpile grazing? |
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Definition
take off one cut of hay, allow fields to recover, put cows on in fall, leave there as long as possible |
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Term
What factors affect how long you can leave a herd in one paddock? |
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Definition
stocking density amount of forage available |
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Term
What type of cattle might you feed low quality roughages to? |
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Definition
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Term
What types of processing might low qual roughages undergo? |
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Definition
grinding/pelleting chemical biological (fungi) |
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Term
What are the pros of using low qual roughages? |
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Definition
-source of fiber to stimulation rumination chewing -cheap feed if you just need to maintain weight |
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Term
What are some problems with feeding forages? (5) |
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Definition
Nitrate poisoning (microbial fermentaion of nitrate produces toxic nitrites) due to over-fertilization of fields
Grass tetany -spring grasses have low Mg, and high organic acids which bind Mg -high N/K fertilization decreases Mg absorption too -incoordination, convulsions, death
Oxalates -decrease Ca absorption
Sweet clover disease -Coumarin converted to Dicumarol, inhibits Vit K prevents blood clotting
Fescue endohyte alkalids -decreases prolactin secretion |
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Term
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Definition
prevents hemoglobin from releasing oxygen |
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