Term
% of soil volume taken up by air and water |
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Definition
Air and water make up about 50% of soil volume – but this can vary from <40 to >60 depending on the soil. |
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Term
2 factors that help define a forage program |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
ADF is used to measure... |
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Definition
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|
Term
ADF vs. digestibility or available energy |
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Definition
The higher the ADF, the lower the digestibility or available energy. |
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Term
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Definition
as the plant matures, ADF increases |
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Term
Acid detergent fiber (ADF) |
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Definition
Fiber measurement extracted with acidic detergent in a technique employed to help appraise the quality of forages. Includes cellulose, lignin, ADIN, and acid-insoluble ash. ADF is highly correlated with cell wall digestibility. The higher the ADF, the lower the digestibility or available energy. Because ADF percentage is forages negatively relates to digestibility, ADF is used to calculate energy values. Low ADF forages are usually preferred, because it means higher net energy. As the plant matures, ADF increases. |
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Term
Acid detergent insoluble crude protein (ADICP) |
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Definition
This estimates the nitrogen that has low digestibility in the rumen and the intestine. It is important for determining the value of heat-damaged hay and silage. A little ADIN is good because it increases bypass protein, but too much may reduce total protein availability. |
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Term
Acid soils are phytotoxic as a result of... |
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Definition
nutritional disorders, deficiencies, or unavailability of essential nutrients such as calcium, magnesium, molybdenum, and phosphorus, and toxicity of aluminum, manganese, and hydrogen activity. |
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Term
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Definition
Protein content adjusted for the amount of heat-damaged protein. Used in place of CP when ADIN makes up more than 10 percent of the CP content of a feed. If no heat damage has occurred, then the adjusted crude protein equals the crude protein. |
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Term
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Definition
The building blocks of proteins. Used extensively for milk and muscle protein synthesis. Used also for glucose synthesis in the liver. |
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Term
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Definition
A colorless nitrogen compound produced as protein and nonprotein nitrogen degrades or breaks down in the rumen. It can be used to synthesize bacterial protein. |
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Term
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Definition
forage directly eaten by the animal |
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Term
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Definition
the ultimate test of forage quality, especially when forages are fed alone and free choice. Forage quality encompasses “nutritive value” (the potential for supplying nutrients, i.e., digestibility and nutrient content), how much animals will consume, and any anti-quality factors present. Animal performance can be influenced by any of several factors associated with either the plants or the animals (figure 1). Failure to give proper consideration to any of these factors may reduce an animal’s performance level, which in turn reduces potential income. |
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Term
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Definition
A negatively charged ion or particle, such as chloride or sulfate. Anionic salts are nutritionally important in dry cow rations to aid in the prevention of milk fever. |
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Term
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Definition
when the plant is ready for flowering and such |
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Term
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Definition
Various compounds may be present in forage that can lower animal performance, cause sickness, or even result in death. Such compounds include tannins, nitrates, alkaloids, cyanoglycosides, estrogens, and mycotoxins. The presence and/or severity of these elements depend on the plant species present (including weeds), time of year, environmental conditions, and animal sensitivity. High-quality forages must not contain harmful levels of anti-quality components. |
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Term
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Definition
The mineral matter present in feed. It is measured by burning the sample at 500°C until all organic matter is burned and removed. |
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Term
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Definition
Determined by subtracting unavailable protein from crude protein. |
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Term
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Definition
when the plant starts shifting to reproduction
the stage where the inflourescence moves towards elongation, something like that |
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Term
Brassicas are very high in ______, but extremely low in ______. |
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Definition
crude protein and energy fiber |
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Term
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Definition
Chemical compound that resists changes in pH with the addition (or loss) of acid or base. Buffers, such as sodium bicarbonate, are supplemented to reduce the risk of rumen acidosis (low pH). |
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Term
CEC of a soil depends on... |
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Definition
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|
Term
CEC of humus (organic matter) |
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Definition
average: 200 meq/100g range: 100-300 meq/100g |
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Term
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Definition
average: 80 meq/100g range: 20-40 meq/100g |
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Term
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Definition
average: 8 meq/100g range: 3-15 meq/100g |
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Term
|
Definition
average: 80 meq/100g range: 60-100 meq/100g |
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Term
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Definition
the c'tration of CO2 at which plants show no net fixation of CO2 |
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Term
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Definition
conservation reserve program |
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Term
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Definition
Includes the sugars, starch, cellulose, gums, and related substances. Carbohydrates are the largest component in the dairy cow diet and contribute 60 to 70 percent of the net energy used for milk production. Their abbreviation, CHO, indicates that they contain carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen |
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Term
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Definition
A positively charged ion or particle. |
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Term
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Definition
The principle carbohydrate constituent of plant cell membranes. It is made available to ruminants through the action of cellulolytic bacteria in the rumen. |
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Term
Cheaper to produce animals on ______ than on ______ |
|
Definition
forages corn and concentrate |
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Term
Clays are minerals made of... |
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Definition
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|
Term
Components of a forage system |
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Definition
-soil -forage plants -production characteristics -grazing animals |
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Term
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Definition
A broad classification of feedstuffs that are high in energy and low in crude fiber (less than 18 percent). Included are cereal grains, soybean oil meal, cottonseed meal, and by-products of the milling industry such as corn gluten and wheat bran. A concentrate may be low or rich in protein. |
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Term
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Definition
Critical LAI = LAI required to intercept 95% of incident light |
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|
Term
Critical LAI value for alfalfa |
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Definition
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|
Term
Critical LAI value for orchardgrass |
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Definition
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|
Term
Critical LAI value for white clover |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
A measure of the fat content as determined by ether extraction. This measure may also contain plant pigments, esters and aldehydes. Fat content of byproducts such as french fry waste should be checked frequently, since there can be considerable variation in these products. |
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Term
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Definition
That portion of feedstuffs composed of polysaccharides such as cellulose, hemicellulose, and lignin. These serve as structural and protective parts of plants (high in forages and low in grains). CF is no longer considered a viable measurement. |
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Term
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Definition
Total protein in a feed. To calculate the protein percentage, a feed is first chemically analyzed for nitrogen content. Since proteins average approximately 16 percent nitrogen, the percentage of nitrogen in the analysis is multiplied by 6.25 to give the percent CP. |
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Term
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Definition
growth habit that is between upright and prostrate |
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Term
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Definition
Acid detergent fiber (ADF) and neutral detergent fiber (NDF) are frequently used as standard forage testing techniques for fiber analysis. NDF approximates the total cell wall constituents including hemicellulose, whereas ADF primarily represents cellulose and lignin. ADF is often used to calculate digestibility, and NDF is used to predict intake potential. |
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Term
Dietary cation-anion difference (DCAD) |
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Definition
DCAD is the milliequivalent (meq) difference between the major cations and anions in a diet. The DCAD can be calculated when the percentages of Na, K, Cl, and S (DM basis) in the diet are known. DCAD, meq/100 grams of DM = [(%Na/.023) + (%K/.039)] – [(%Cl/.0355) + (%S/.016)]. Feeding diets with a negative DCAD (anionic diet) in late pregnancy may reduce milk fever problems through alterations in calcium metabolism. |
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Term
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Definition
How much of the forage will be digested?
Digestibility (the extent to which forage is absorbed as it passes through an animal’s digestive tract) varies greatly. Immature, leafy plant tissues may be 80 to 90% digested, while less than 50% of mature, stemmy material is digested. |
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Term
Digestible dry matter (DDM) |
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Definition
Estimates the percentage of forage that is digestible. It is calculated from ADF values and is similar to TDN. The more ADF a feed contains, the lower the DDM value will be. DDM values are calculated using the equation DDM% = 88.9 – (ADF% x 0.779). |
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Term
Distribution of farmland in US, the darker the higher % of land |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
That part of feed, which is not water. Percent DM = 100% - moisture %. Feed values and nutrient requirements for ruminants are expressed on a dry matter or moisture-free basis to compensate for the large variation in moisture content of feeds commonly fed to cattle. |
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Term
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Definition
Estimates the maximum amount of forage dry matter a cow will eat. It is expressed as a percent of body weight and is calculated from NDF by: DMI (% of body weight) = 120/NDF%. |
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Term
EFFECT OF SPECIES RICHNESS ON GRASSLAND PRODUCTIVITY |
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Definition
[image] The reason the increase is not linear is because of competition |
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Term
Effect of Organic Matter on Pore Space |
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Definition
increases macropores and decreases micropores |
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Term
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Definition
Forage preserved by fermentation in a silo, pit, or stack, usually in chopped form. Also called silage. |
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Term
Example of forages on crop land |
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Definition
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|
Term
Factors having the greatest impact on forage quality |
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Definition
forage species, stage of maturity at harvest, and (if forage is mechanically harvested) harvesting and storage techniques. |
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Term
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Definition
The cellulose portion of roughages (forages) that is low in TDN and hard to digest by monogastric animals. |
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Term
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Definition
the amount of water retained in soil after infiltration; this is the water held against gravity |
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Term
For N, the priority is... |
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Definition
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|
Term
For grasses, you gotta provide enough (what nutrient?), but for legumes, you gotta provide enough (what nutrient?) |
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Definition
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|
Term
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Definition
The vegetative portion of plants in a fresh, dried, or ensiled state which is fed to livestock. Grasses and legumes cut at the proper stage of maturity and stored to preserve quality. |
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Term
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Definition
it can be defined as the extent to which a forage has the potential to produce a desired animal response |
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Term
Forage “Quality” includes... |
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Definition
1) nutritive value 2) Physical attributes of forage that regulate intake 3) “antiquality” compounds that limit intake (flavors, toxins, tannins) – these are aspects related to palatability. |
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|
Term
Forages are important in... |
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Definition
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|
Term
Forages can be harvested for ______ or... |
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Definition
|
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Term
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Definition
a steep slope or long cliff that occurs from faulting and resulting erosion and separates two relatively level areas of differing elevations |
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Term
Grass takes a longer time to regrow if you... |
|
Definition
cut it to the ground or graze it intensely |
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Term
Grasses get most of the N used for regrowth from... |
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Definition
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|
Term
Green chop (fresh forage) |
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Definition
Forages harvested (cut and chopped) in the field and fed directly to livestock. Also called zero grazing or soilage. |
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Term
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Definition
Dried forage (grasses, alfalfa, clovers) used for feeding farm animals. |
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Term
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Definition
Silage usually containing 70 percent or more moisture. |
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Term
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Definition
the final stage of the decomposition of organic matter |
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Term
If chicory is grown without a legume partner,... |
|
Definition
100 to 150 lbs (N)/Acre should be applied in split applications: 1/3 at green up in early spring, 1/3 in early summer and 1/3 in early fall |
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Term
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Definition
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|
Term
In most cases, this determines the productivity of an animal. |
|
Definition
the intake potential and digestible energy content of the forage |
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Term
|
Definition
How much will they eat?
Animals must consume adequate quantities of forage to perform well.Typically, the higher the palatability and forage quality, the higher the intake. |
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Term
Intense grazing of chickory should prevent plants from... |
|
Definition
bolting, which will extend the vegetative state and forage productivity. |
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|
Term
Jefferson brought alfalfa to the US in... |
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Definition
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|
Term
Knowing this is necessary to formulate rations that result in desired animal performance. |
|
Definition
forage quality and animal nutritional needs |
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Term
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Definition
Clovers, alfalfa, and similar crops that can absorb nitrogen directly from the atmosphere through action of bacteria that live in their roots and use it as a nutrient for growth. |
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|
Term
Legumes get most of the N used for regrowth from... |
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Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
A compound which, with cellulose, forms the cell walls of plants. It is practically indigestible. |
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|
Term
Limitations to Digestion Studies for Pastures |
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Definition
-Forage always changing – can’t collect adequate supply of fresh forage at a constant stage of development -Digestion studies expensive and time consuming -Hard to compare many different species or varieties with different sampling dates, replications, etc. |
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Term
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Definition
Any one of a group of organic substances that are insoluble in water though soluble in alcohol, ether, chloroform, and other fat solvents, and have a greasy feel. They are rich sources of dietary energy. |
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Term
Lots of farmland around Mississippi River because of... |
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Definition
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|
Term
Lots of farmland in Coastal Plain and Great Plains due to... |
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Definition
the land being flat and suitable for farming |
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Term
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Definition
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|
Term
Main features of soil structure |
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Definition
-arrangement of particles into aggregates -stability of aggregates when exposed to water |
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Term
Major difference between the endosperms of grasses and legumes |
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Definition
grasses have starch in endosperm and legumes have proteins and oils in cotyledons |
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|
Term
Map of US showing % of farmland as pastureland, the darker the higher % |
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Definition
|
|
Term
Map of US showing % of farmland that’s harvested forages, the darker, the higher % |
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Definition
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|
Term
Metamorphic rocks formed by... |
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Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Calcium (Ca), phosphorus (P), magnesium (Mg), potassium (K) and sulfur (S) are normally expressed as a percentage of each in the feed. |
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Term
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Definition
Any glacially formed accumulation of unconsolidated glacial debris (soil and rock) which can occur in currently glaciated and formerly glaciated regions |
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|
Term
More organic matter in grassland thanks in part to... |
|
Definition
grass having less lignin and lower C:N ratio |
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|
Term
Most clay minerals are described as... |
|
Definition
hydrous alumino- silicates |
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|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
NDF is used to measure... |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
NDF vs. feed intake and why |
|
Definition
NDF gives bulk or fill to the diet and is negatively correlated with feed intake |
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Term
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Definition
-Grind sample to 1-mm size in a Wiley Mill (standard) (day 1) -Scan sample (1 minute each) -Select* a subset of scanned samples to run through wet chemical analysis -Calibrate* spectral characteristics using wet chemical results -Predict remaining samples without wet chemistry
*Can be skipped if a calibration equation has already been developed. |
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Term
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Definition
Is the energy available to an animal in a feed after removing the energy lost as feces, urine, gas and heat produced during digestion and metabolism. NE is the most useful energy estimate for formulating rations. Often, other energy values are determined from ADF using regression equations. These equations were developed from digestion trials. |
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|
Term
Net energy for gain (NEG) |
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Definition
An estimate of the energy value of a feed used for body tissue gain (weight gain) above that required for maintenance. |
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|
Term
Net energy for lactation (NEL) |
|
Definition
An estimate of the energy value of a feed used for maintenance plus milk production during lactation and for maintenance plus the last two months of gestation for dry, pregnant cows. |
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|
Term
Net energy for maintenance (NEM) |
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Definition
An estimate of the energy value of a feed used to keep an animal in energy equilibrium, neither gaining nor losing weight. |
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|
Term
Neutral detergent fiber (NDF) |
|
Definition
A measurement of fiber after digesting in a nonacidic, nonalkaline detergent as an aid in determining quality of forages. Contains the fibers in ADF, plus hemicellulose. Measures the structural part of the plant, the plant cell wall which consists of lignin, cellulose, and hemicellulose. NDF gives bulk or fill to the diet and is negatively correlated with feed intake. Because NDF can be used to predict intake, it is one of the most valuable analysis to have conducted on forages for dairy rations. Low NDF is usually desired. As maturity of the plant at harvest increases, cell wall content of the plant increases and NDF increases. |
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Term
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Definition
Nitrogen in the food consumed minus nitrogen in feces and nitrogen in urine (nitrogen retention.) |
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Term
Nitrogen-free extract (NFE) |
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Definition
Consisting of carbohydrates, sugars, starches, and a major portion of materials classed as hemicellulose in feeds. When crude protein, fat, water, ash, and fiber are added and the sum is subtracted from 100, the difference is NFE. |
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Term
Non-protein nitrogen (NPN) |
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Definition
All nitrogen fed to animals is not necessarily found in proteins. NPN reflects other sources of nitrogen. An important source of NPN in the ruminant diet is urea. Rumen bacteria can utilize NPN to produce microbial proteins, thus providing amino acids to the cow. |
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Term
Nonfiber carbohydrates (NFC) |
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Definition
The highly digestible carbohydrate fraction of feeds consisting of starch, sugar, and pectin. Are the non-cell wall carbohydrates consisting primarily of starches, sugars and pectin that are rapidly fermented in the rumen. Subtracting percent (DM basis) NDF, CP, ether extract (fat) and ash from 100 provides an estimate of NFC percent in feeds. (NFC% = 100% - [%NDF + %CP + %fat + %ash]). In the absence of actual measured values, average values of the feedstuff are used in the equation. Also called nonstructural carbohydrates (NSC). |
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|
Term
Nonfiber carbohydrates (NFC) aka... |
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Definition
nonstructural carbohydrates (NSC) |
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|
Term
Nonprotein nitrogen (NPN) |
|
Definition
Used by rumen microorganisms to synthesize protein. |
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Term
|
Definition
Once digested, will the forage provide an adequate level of nutrients? Living forage plants usually contain 70 to 90% water.To standardize analyses, forage yield and nutrient content are usually expressed on a dry matter (DM) basis. Forage dry matter can be divided into two main categories: (1) cell contents (the non-structural parts of the plant tissue such as protein, sugar, and starch); and (2) structural components of the cell wall (cellulose, hemicellulose, and lignin). |
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Term
Nutrient solution culture |
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Definition
By far the most common screening medium for Al tolerance is solution culture, which provides easy access to the root system, strict control over nutrient availability and pH, and non-destructive measurements of tolerance. |
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Term
Older forage tends to have (more or less) energy available |
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Definition
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|
Term
One of the most significant benefits of growing legumes with grasses |
|
Definition
improvement of forage quality |
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|
Term
One of the most significant factors, which determine the nutritive value of a feed |
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Definition
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|
Term
Organic layer in forest soils made of... |
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Definition
leaves and twigs and such |
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Term
|
Definition
Will the animals eat the forage?
Animals select one forage over another based on smell, feel, and taste. Palatability may therefore be influenced by texture, leafiness, fertilization, dung or urine patches, moisture content, pest infestation, or compounds that cause a forage to taste sweet, sour, or salty. High-quality forages are generally highly palatable. |
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|
Term
Peanut is a [what season?] crop, so you expect it to go dormant in [what month?] |
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Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
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|
Term
Plant grows back from the... |
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Definition
|
|
Term
Plants store excess energy as... |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
refers to the volume of soil voids that can be filled by water and/or air |
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|
Term
Problems with Predictions when it comes to forages |
|
Definition
Assume ADF has constant relationship to digestibility – not true in reality Better to use a measure of digestible fiber than ADF |
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Term
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Definition
The heat involved in the manufacturing processes of many byproducts can affect rumen protein degradability and total digestibility. Most commercial feed testing labs do not offer analysis of rumen degradable protein (RDP) because of procedural variability. That explains why most people have relied on feed composition tables like the NRC for both RDP and RUP. To determine RUP values, some commercial labs have started using in situ bag techniques. You need to be careful when using the results of in situ or in vitro procedures, because they determine rumen degradability in a certain rumen environment. It might not be similar to the actual rumen environment of the cows you are working with. |
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|
Term
|
Definition
A term indicating the total nitrogen content of a substance in comparison with the nitrogen content of protein (usually plant). For example, the nonprotein nitrogen (NPN) compound, urea, contains approximately 45 percent nitrogen and has a protein equivalent of 281 percent (6.25 x 45 percent). |
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|
Term
Proximate vs. Van Soest Analysis |
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Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
all the parameters and such |
|
|
Term
RFV is calculated from... |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
the higher the RFV, the better the quality |
|
|
Term
Rain during field drying damages ______ hay more than ______ hay. |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Range lands made mostly of... |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Relative feed value (RFV) |
|
Definition
An index for ranking grass and legume forages based on combining digestibility and intake potential. Calculated from ADF and NDF. The higher the RFV, the better the quality. It is used to compare varieties, match hay/silage inventories to animals, and to market hay.
Developed primarily for use with legume or legume/grass forages, RFV combines digestibility and intake estimates into one number for an easy and effective way to identify and market quality hay. RFV is expressed as a percent compared to full bloom alfalfa at 100 percent RFV. RFV above 130 are considered good dairy quality hay. The higher the value the better, RFV in the range of 150 is desirable. RFV is calculated by: RFV% = DDM (%) x DMI (% of body weight)/ 1.29. |
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|
Term
Relative forage quality (RFQ) |
|
Definition
An index for ranking grass and legume forages based on DN and intake potential. Calculated from NDF, CP, EE, NDFD, ADF, and NFC. It matches animal performance better than RFV across a wide range of forages. |
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Term
|
Definition
Consists of pasture, silage, hay, or other dry fodder. It may be of high or low quality. Roughages are usually high in crude fiber (more than 18 percent) and relatively low in NFE (approximately 40 percent). |
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|
Term
Rumen degradable protein (RDP) |
|
Definition
Protein or nitrogen that is degraded in the rumen by microorganisms and incorporated into microbial protein or freed as ammonia. |
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|
Term
Rumen degradable protein (RDP) known previously as... |
|
Definition
degradable intake protein (DIP) |
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|
Term
Rumen undegradable protein (RUP) |
|
Definition
Protein or nitrogen that is not degraded in the rumen by microorganisms but is available to be digested by the cow. |
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|
Term
Rumen undegradable protein (RUP), known previously as... |
|
Definition
undegradable intake protein (UIP) |
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|
Term
|
Definition
A completely hydrogenated fat, each carbon atom is associated with the maximum number of hydrogens; there are not double bonds. Saturated fatty acids are solid at room temperature. Tallow is an example of a saturated fat, although approximately 50 percent of the fatty acids are unsaturated. Saturated fats tend to have less detrimental effects on rumen fermentation than unsaturated fats. |
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|
Term
Sedimentary rocks formed by... |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Green forage, such as grass or clover, or fodder, such as field corn or sorghum, that is chopped into a silo where it is packed or compressed to exclude air and undergoes an acid fermentation (lactic and acetic acids) that retards spoilage. |
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|
Term
Silica combines with ______ in oxides |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
The protein fraction composed of both non-protein nitrogen (NPN) and true protein, which is rapidly degraded in the rumen. It is normally expressed as a percent of the crude protein. |
|
|
Term
Some antiquality elements in forages |
|
Definition
tall fescue endophytes, toxins, and such |
|
|
Term
Some characteristics of improved pastures |
|
Definition
-Introduced species -Few species -Dominant species -Limited by nutrients -High-input management -Robust ecosystem -Multiple livestock enterprises |
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|
Term
Some characteristics of natural grasslands |
|
Definition
-Native species predominate -Species diverse -Eveness of species (basically, the species know how to live with each other) -Limited by water supply -Low-input management (such tools include fire and grazing) -Fragile ecosystem -Extensive management -Cow-calf best use |
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|
Term
Some energy that could be used in fermentation |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Some factors in the regrowth of forage plants |
|
Definition
-Residual leaf area -Stored reserves |
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|
Term
Some forage-livestock industries in GA |
|
Definition
-beef -dairy -cash hay -horses -sheep and goats |
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|
Term
Some problems with overgrazing |
|
Definition
-Intake limited -Low animal gain and production -Low $ return per acre |
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|
Term
Some problems with undergrazing |
|
Definition
-Old forage has low nutritive value -Selective grazing -Low $ return per acre |
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|
Term
Some things involved in a forage system |
|
Definition
-soil and its characteristics -the plant -the animal that eats the plant |
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|
Term
Some things that affect the yield, persistence, and composition of a forage |
|
Definition
-Plant species – Cultivar choice -Stress and disease tolerances; important for resistance -Cell wall structure – Cell and tissue types -Maturity -Bloat inducing? -Presence of deleterious compounds? |
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|
Term
Some things to consider regarding animal utilization in forage systems |
|
Definition
-Animal nutritional needs -Seasonal forage distribution -Palatability (weather the animal like it or not) -Species composition (important for pastures) -Growth and removal rates |
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|
Term
Some types of forage lands |
|
Definition
-forages on crop land -permanent pastureland |
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|
Term
Some types of fresh harvested forages |
|
Definition
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Term
Some types of preserved harvested forages |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Stems and leaves come from... |
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Definition
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Term
The TDN is a matter of... |
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Definition
what’s inside the cell and what’s digestible |
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Term
The accuracy of forage analysis depends on... |
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Definition
the analytical procedures used and the precision of laboratory techniques. |
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Term
The balance between Ca, P, and Mg has something to do with... |
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Definition
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Term
The bulk of agricultural lime comes from... |
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Definition
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Term
The main symptom of Al toxicity |
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Definition
rapid inhibition of root growth |
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Term
The most common arrangement for collecting the excreta of animals for digestibility experiments |
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Definition
through the use of metabolic crates
distorts results due to stressing the animal |
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Term
The primary response to aluminum stress occurs in... |
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Definition
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Term
The toxic range for nitrates |
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Definition
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Term
The ultimate and most direct method of evaluating for Al tolerance |
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Definition
by measuring economic yield (forage or grain) under field conditions. |
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Term
Total digestible nutrients (TDN) |
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Definition
Denotes the sum of the digestible crude protein, digestible nitrogen-free extract, digestible crude fiber and 2.25 times the digestible ether extract (fat). This value is often calculated from ADF. It is less accurate than NE for formulating diets containing both forage and grain. Most rations are now formulated using NE; however, TDN is still used to calculate beef cow rations where the diet is primarily forage. |
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Term
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Definition
A blend of all feedstuffs (forages and grains) in one feed. A complete ration fits well into mechanized feeding and the use of computers to formulate least-cost rations. |
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Term
Trees have their strength because of... |
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Definition
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Term
Types of animal harvested forages |
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Definition
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Term
Types of machine harvested forage |
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Definition
-fresh harvested -preserved harvested |
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Term
Unavailable protein or insoluble crude protein |
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Definition
Calculated from nitrogen that is bound to the acid detergent fiber fraction of the feed. Normally, about 1% protein on a DM basis is found in this fraction. Values greater than 1% indicate heat damage. |
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Term
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Definition
A fat having one or more double bonds, not completely hydrogenated. |
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Term
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Definition
A nonprotein organic nitrogenous compound. It is made synthetically by combining ammonia and carbon dioxide. |
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Term
Voluntary intake, a prime consideration in feeding, is often estimated based on... |
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Definition
neutral detergent fiber (NDF) content. |
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Definition
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Definition
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Definition
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White clover is clone form because of... |
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Definition
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Term
White clover often planted with... |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
the point where the plant can no longer get water from the soil; this is the permanent wilting point; this is when the plant can no longer pump water into it |
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Term
Wind erosion is one of the consequences of... |
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Definition
turning natural grasslands into arable land |
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Term
a certain characteristic of grazing tolerant cultivars of alfalfa and why that is |
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Definition
-Those that are grazing tolerant tend to be winter dormant -Crown morphology is the reason |
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Term
a characteristic of alfalfa that makes it hard to replant it |
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Definition
autotoxicity and allelopathic properties, even against itself |
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Term
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Definition
A lot is defined as forage taken from the same farm, field, and cut under uniform conditions within a 48-hour time period. |
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Term
a forage that's a good source of protein |
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Definition
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Term
a means of wet chemistry for digestion studies |
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Definition
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Term
a pretty good way to dilute the endophyte in tall fescue |
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Definition
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Term
a protein in legumes that has a high affinity for N |
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Definition
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Term
advantage of RFQ over RFV |
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Definition
It matches animal performance better than RFV across a wide range of forages. |
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Term
advantages of proximate analysis |
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Definition
Proximate analysis gives you more details and a better indication of performance |
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Term
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Definition
soils transported by water |
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Term
amount of ADF in feed vs. DDM value |
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Definition
The more ADF a feed contains, the lower the DDM value will be. |
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Term
amount of fiber in a forage vs. fillingness to the animal |
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Definition
The more fiber in the forage, the more filling it is to the animal |
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Term
amount of fiber vs. amount of energy |
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Definition
When the amount of fiber goes up, the amount of energy goes down |
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Term
amount of soil mass taken up by minerals |
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Definition
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Term
amount of soil mass taken up by organic matter |
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Definition
0-5% (except for histosols) |
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Term
an energy related reason animals are sometimes given antibiotics |
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Definition
Animals are sometimes given antibiotics to minimize energy loss from fermentation |
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Term
an example of how parent material can affect soil acidity |
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Definition
Soils that develop from granite parent materials acidify at a faster rate than soils developed from calcareous parent materials. |
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Term
an important source of NPN to livestock and why that is |
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Definition
An important source of NPN in the ruminant diet is urea. Rumen bacteria can utilize NPN to produce microbial proteins, thus providing amino acids to the cow. |
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Term
an important use of buffers in livestock animals |
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Definition
used to reduce the risk of rumen acidosis (low pH) |
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Term
anatomy of a C3 grass blade vs. anatomy of a C4 grass blade |
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Definition
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Term
anatomy of the leaf of a C3 plant |
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Definition
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Term
anatomy of the leaf of a C4 plant |
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Definition
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Term
anatomy of warm season grass at various scales |
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Definition
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Term
another CO2 fixing enzyme that's found in the mesophyll cells of C4 plants |
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Definition
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Term
are C3 grasses warm season or cool season? |
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Definition
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Term
are all amino acids created equal? |
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Definition
no, some have higher N content than others |
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Term
brief description of the stolons in white clover |
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Definition
Stolons are above ground stems; each node has meristematic tissue |
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Term
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Definition
special type of mesophyll that surrounds the vascular bundles |
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Term
can alfalfa reseed itself? |
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Definition
Alfalfa is not a good reseeder |
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Term
can alfalfa tolerate grazing? |
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Definition
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Term
can plants convert atmospheric N into useable N? |
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Definition
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Term
can you overseed with red clover? |
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Definition
Overseeding is OK—no autotoxicity |
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Term
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Definition
the grain or seed for grasses |
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Term
characteristics of forages that regulate intake by the animal |
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Definition
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Term
characteristics of illite |
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Definition
-2:1 non-expanding clay -Clay lattices held together by K and H. -K not plant available except by weathering -Not as tight as kaolinite, but much tighter than montmorillonite -Not much movement of other things in and out of interior surfaces |
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Term
chart of non-structural carbohydrates in grasses (memorize this) |
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Definition
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Term
chart showing how pH affects Al c'tration in soil solution and root growth |
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Definition
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Term
chart showing soil water content at different textures |
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Definition
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Term
chart showing solubility of certain elements at various pH's |
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Definition
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Term
chart showing the general composition of most soils (except for histosols) |
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Definition
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Term
chart showing the various porosities for various textures |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
composition of alfalfa leaves |
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Definition
18-28% NDF 12-20% ADF 22-35% CP |
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Term
composition of the whole alfalfa plant |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
it seems that concentrates are materials diverted away from people |
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Term
cons of the proximate analysis system |
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Definition
Inaccurate quantification of nutritional entities |
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Term
criteria of a good marker in feed analysis |
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Definition
-strictly non absorbable -must not affect or be affected by the gastrointestinal tract or its microbial population -must be physically similar to or intimately associated with feed material -its method of estimation in digesta samples must be specific and sensitive and not interfere with other analyses |
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Term
cross section of a C3 grass blade |
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Definition
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Term
current grasslands in the US |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
depiction of N movement in grasses |
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Definition
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Term
depiction of N movement in legumes |
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Definition
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Term
depiction of a grass meristem |
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Definition
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Term
depiction of how C4 p'synth happens in C4 plants |
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Definition
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Term
depiction of how legume roots develop nodules |
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Definition
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Term
depiction of how p'synth works |
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Definition
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Term
depiction of how rock is weathered to form soil |
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Definition
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Term
depiction of some ways plants use N reserves |
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Definition
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Term
depiction of the composition of cellulose |
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Definition
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Term
depiction of the cycling between the components of a forage system |
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Definition
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Term
depiction of the differences between monocot and dicot seeds |
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Definition
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Term
depiction of the exchange between C3 and C4 machinery that occurs in C4 p'synth |
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Definition
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Term
depiction of the general anatomy of a plant cell wall |
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Definition
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Term
depiction of the general structure of clays between sheets of clay |
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Definition
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Term
depiction of the germination process in legume seeds |
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Definition
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Term
depiction of the germination process of dicots |
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Definition
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Term
depiction of the grass seed germination process |
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Definition
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Term
depiction of the reproductive phase of grass development |
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Definition
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Term
depiction of the transition phase of grass development |
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Definition
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Term
depiction of the types of cell walls that can be found in forage plants |
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Definition
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Term
depiction of the typical yield distribution of bermudagrass and other warm season grasses |
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Definition
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Term
depiction of the typical yield distribution of tall fescue and other cool season grasses |
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Definition
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Term
depiction of the use of carbohydrates in plants |
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Definition
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Term
depiction of the vegetative phase of grass development |
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Definition
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Term
depiction of the visual indicators of monocot germination |
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Definition
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Term
depictions of how C3 p'synth works |
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Definition
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Term
description of Al-injured roots |
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Definition
-stubby -brittle -Root tips and lateral roots thicken and turn brown. -The root system as a whole is affected, with many stubby lateral roots and no fine branching. -Such roots are inefficient in absorbing nutrients and water. |
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Term
description of the flowers of red clover |
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Definition
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Term
description of the leaves of red clover |
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Definition
leaves are large and nearly always have a prominent V-shaped pattern, or watermark, on the leaflets |
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Term
description of the stems of red clover |
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Definition
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Term
description of the top layer of a forested soil |
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Definition
Forested soil exhibits surface layers (O horizons) of leaves and twigs in various stages of decomposition, along with a thin, mineral A horizon |
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Term
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Definition
flowers all at once. Apical meristem ceases to grow. Axillary buds terminate. |
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Term
diagram of where energy from food can be lost |
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Definition
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Term
difference between the anatomy of the leaves of C3 and C4 grasses in terms of composition |
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Definition
there are proportionally more thick walled fiber cells of the C4 grass leaf blade because there are fewer mesophyll cells |
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Term
difference between the anatomy of the leaves of C3 and C4 grasses in terms of the vascular bundles |
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Definition
the vascular bundles of the C4 leaves are are spaced more closely, whereas the C3 grass has many more mesophyll cells surrounding each vascular bundle |
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Term
digestibility of the contents of alfalfa cell wall |
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Definition
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Term
digestibility of the contents of alfalfa cells |
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Definition
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Term
disadvantages of the Van Soest Analysis |
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Definition
This is still a slow, labor intensive method – not useful for many samples, or for routine use in testing laboratories. |
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Term
distribution of land use in the United States |
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Definition
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Term
do legumes like or dislike wet soil? |
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Definition
Most legumes don’t like wet soils |
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Term
do the mesophyll cells have rubisco? |
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Definition
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Term
do you want NDF to be high or low? |
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Definition
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Term
do you want RFV to be high or low? |
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Definition
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Term
does delayed harvest result in quality loss in forage? |
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Definition
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Term
does the root cap provide protection against Al damage? |
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Definition
may or may not, depending on the study |
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Term
effect of OM on bulk density |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
cotyledon(s) emerging above the soil surface |
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Term
even with Near Infrared Reflectance Spectroscopy (NIRS), you still gotta do the wet chemistry from time to time. why is that? |
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Definition
to determine the parameters; most of the time, it is species specific |
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Term
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Definition
species know how to live with each other |
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Term
example of how rhizomes benefit Bermudagrass |
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Definition
Bermudagrass has rhizomes with scales; the scales have meristematic tissue |
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Term
example of how stolons benefit white clover |
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Definition
In white clover, the old plants die and the stolons create new plants |
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Term
examples of how OM can be actively manipulated by management |
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Definition
-tillage “burns up” OM -perennial plants add OM |
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Term
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Definition
reference substance added to the feed |
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Term
external tolerance mechanisms |
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Definition
mechanisms that facilitate Al exclusion from the root apex |
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Term
extravaginal tillers come from... |
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Definition
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Term
fiber content vs. forage quality |
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Definition
As fiber increases, forage quality declines. |
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Term
global distribution of acid soils |
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Definition
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Term
good animal performance results when |
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Definition
animals consume forage that is suitably high in nutrients and low in fiber |
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Term
grasses with which type of p'synth have more energy? |
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Definition
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Term
growth habit of red clover |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
wet forage that's harvested and wrapped in plastic to be silage |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
historical grasslands in the US |
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Definition
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Term
how a good forage system produces environmental benefits |
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Definition
-Limit soil erosion -improve soil structure -conserve water -improve water quality |
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Term
how age can affect digestibility |
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Definition
It is generally felt that animal individuality affects digestibility more than age. However, older animals appear to better digest some nutrients (e.g., fiber, minerals) than do the young of their species. The evidence available indicated that, in general, age itself makes little or no difference in the ability of animals to digest nutrients. In the case of ruminant species, the young cannot digest much roughage until their digestive tracts, especially their rumens, are developed. Also the ability of old animals to digest feed is often impaired by poor teeth, which makes adequate chewing of their feed difficult. Declining health might further adversely affect digestibility at an advanced age. However, the digestibility of feed by younger animals may often be influenced more by the presence of parasites. |
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Term
how aggregation decreases porosity |
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Definition
because more large pores are present as compared to single clay and silt particles that are associated with smaller pores. |
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Term
how annual clovers should be seeded in fall |
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Definition
-Alone or with cool season annual grasses -Overseeding warm season pasture or hay |
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Term
how arrowleaf clover grows |
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Definition
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Term
how bacterioids occur in legumes |
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Definition
Cells in nodules have multiple odd-shaped bacteria called bacteroids. |
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Term
how cellulose is made available to animals |
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Definition
It is made available to ruminants through the action of cellulolytic bacteria in the rumen. |
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Term
how chemical composition can affect digestibility |
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Definition
One of the most significant factor, which affect digestibility is the chemical composition of the feeds (Poppi et al., 1981b; Luginbuhl et al., 1994; Sarwar et al., 1985). Digestibility of one feed is believed to differ from that of a similar feed because each may contain different contents of certain chemical entities, particularly since some of these diminish the opportunity for the digestive enzymes to come in contact with their respective substrates. On the other hand, digestibility of complete feeds can be enhanced by the additions of relatively small quantities of specific nutrients such as protein or soluble carbohydrates. |
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Term
how chickory should be grazed and why |
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Definition
it should be grazed heavily because it’s fast growing and overgrown chickory loses quality |
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Term
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Definition
Structurally, the clay minerals are composed of planes of cations, arranged in sheets, which may be tetrahedrally or octahedrally coordinated (with oxygen) |
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Term
how climate can affect digestibility |
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Definition
The digestibility was higher at higher temperature than in a cold environment which may be due to higher mean retention time of the feedstuff in the digestive tract (Faichney, 1986). In some studies (Kennedy et al., 1976; Kennedy & Milligen, 1978; Kennedy, 1985), sheep exposed to cold (0ºC) had a lower digestibility than controls in warmer temperatures (22ºC). Increased reticulo-rumen motility in the sheep exposed to cold temperature (Kennedy, 1985) may be responsible for the decreased mean retention time. Increasing passage rate in such circumstances could serve as a strategy for increasing dry matter consumption to meet demands for higher energy imposed by cold climate (Merchen, 1988). Neural and endocrine regulation of ruminal contractions in animals exposed to cold have also been reported, but the precise mechanism is still to be determined (Kennedy et al., 1980). |
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Term
how clipping affects grass roots |
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Definition
Clipping and height of clipping make roots recede; the closer you clip it, the shallower the roots get; the plant redirects energy to growing leaves |
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Term
how cool season grasses respond to day length |
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Definition
Cool season grass switches to reproductive in response to longer day length |
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Term
how crude protein is measured |
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Definition
To calculate the protein percentage, a feed is first chemically analyzed for nitrogen content. Since proteins average approximately 16 percent nitrogen, the percentage of nitrogen in the analysis is multiplied by 6.25 to give the percent CP. |
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Term
how cultivation ruins soil structure |
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Definition
Generally, cultivation decreases porosity, breaks down aggregates, and increases decomposition of organic matter. |
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Term
how dry matter digestibility is usually measured |
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Definition
Usually measured as in vitro dry matter digestibility using rumen fluid in a laboratory digestion protocol. |
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Term
how exercise can affect digestibility |
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Definition
Although some workers have found that exercise hastens the process of digestion, it is generally considered to be a factor of minor importance. Other factors such as frequency of feeding, amount of water ingested and animal species may also affect digestibility but the data are contradictory and work remains to be done on these relationships. |
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Term
how feed intake can affect digestibility |
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Definition
The plane of nutrition is one of the primary factors that affect digestibility of any feed. Experiments have showed that livestock usually, digest a larger percentage of the nutrients in their feed when fed restrictedly than when they receive full feed (Okin & Mathison, 1991; Faichney, 1993; Poppi et al. 1981a). Most data indicate some depression in apparent digestibility as level of intake is increased. This may be due to a more rapid movement of feed through the tract, thus allowing less time for digestion and absorption. |
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Term
how feed processing can affect digestibility |
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Definition
Processing of feedstuffs is conducted in an attempt to enhance digestibility (Faichney, 1986; Sarwar et al., 1992). Changes in physical form can influence digestibility of the dry matter, energy, protein or any of the organic substances in feed products. Such processes as drying, grinding, pelleting and wafering all act to generally affect digestibility. Chemical, biological treatments and chopping improve the digestibility of fibrous feeds (Sarwar et al., 1994). |
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Term
how fructans are synthesized in cool season grasses |
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Definition
by adding fructose to sucrose units |
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Term
how grass affects the soil profile in grassland soil |
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Definition
Most of the organic matter in the grassland is added as fine roots distributed throughout the upper 1 m or so, creating a thick, mineral A horizon |
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Term
how leaf-to-stem ratio is related to forage quality |
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Definition
Reduced leaf-to-stem ratio is a major cause of the decline in forage quality with maturity, and also the loss in quality that occurs under adverse hay curing conditions. Leaves are higher in quality than stems, and the proportion of leaves in forage declines as the plant matures. |
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Term
how lignin can be digested |
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Definition
can be digested with acid, but the chunks are still there |
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Term
how long can fructans be? |
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Definition
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Term
how long can the polymers of glucose in starch be? |
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Definition
Can be hundreds of units long |
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Term
how long do stands of red clover last? |
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Definition
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Term
how much digestible energy can be lost? |
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Definition
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Term
how natural vegetation can influence the type of soil |
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Definition
differences in the distribution of organic matter in the upper part of the soil profile |
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Term
how organic matter improves soil structure |
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Definition
increases aggregate stability |
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Term
how particle size can affect digestibility |
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Definition
Much data exist indicating that forage digestibility is depressed by grinding to a very fine particle size (Galloway et al., 1993; Alwash & Thomas, 1974; Firkins et al., 1986). Fine grinding also apparently increases rate of passage that consequently reduces the digestibility. |
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Term
how perennial plants can benefit soil |
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Definition
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Term
how pollen gets from legumes to insects |
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Definition
stigma rubs belly as insects pollinate |
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Term
how protein is measured in lab analytical techniques |
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Definition
It is commonly measured as crude protein (CP), which is 6.25 times the nitrogen content of forage. |
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Term
how reproductive growth affects forage quality |
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Definition
Reproductive growth lowers leaf-to-stem ratio, and thus forage quality. |
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Term
how rhizomes and stolons can be beneficial for grass plants |
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Definition
they can help with grazing and mowing tolerance |
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Term
how soil porosity is measured |
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Definition
Measured as bulk density: -It is inversely related to bulk density -High bulk density = low porosity |
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Term
how soil texture affects compaction potential |
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Definition
Sands low; clays high (that is, clays are more likely to compact than sands) |
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Term
how soil texture affects nutrient holding capacity |
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Definition
Sands low; clays vary in nutrient holding capacity
this is largely a matter of CEC |
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Term
how soil texture affects permeability to air |
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Definition
Sands are permeable; clays are not |
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Term
how soil texture affects water holding capacity |
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Definition
Sands low; clays high (lots of surface area) |
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Term
how starch can occur in warm season perennial grasses |
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Definition
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Term
how starch is synthesized in warm season grasses |
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Definition
by making polymers of glucose |
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Term
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Definition
they can be a little bit good in terms of bloating |
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Term
how temperature affects forage quality |
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Definition
Plants grown at high temperatures generally produce lower quality forage than plants grown under cooler temperatures, and cool-season species grow most during the cooler months of the year. |
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Term
how the Van Soest Analysis works |
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Definition
1: Grind sample to 1-mm size in a Wiley Mill (standard) (day 1) 2: Perform reflux reactions (ADF, NDF) (days 2, day 3) 3: Perform 72% acid digestion (ADL) (day 4); this digests the cellulose and leaves behind lignin 4: Ash sample (day 5) contains minerals 5: Calculate energy values from fiber content |
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Term
how the ash/ minetal matter in feed is measured |
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Definition
by burning the sample at 500°C until all organic matter is burned and removed. |
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Term
how the growth habit of alfalfa makes it bad for grazing |
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Definition
Alfalfa grows erect, which means the shoot apex is way at the top; if animal clips off the apex, it’ll take a long time for it to regrow, if at all; alfalfa bad for grazing |
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Term
how the maturity of a forage affects its digestibility |
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Definition
The more mature and fibrous (lower in quality) a forage, the longer it takes to be digested and the less an animal will consume. |
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Term
how the number of side chains on hemicellulose affects digestibility |
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Definition
The fewer the side chains, the more digestible the fiber. |
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Term
how the root cap may provide protection against Al damage |
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Definition
through its involvement in signal perception and hormone distribution |
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Term
how the vascular bundles are arranged in C4 p'synth |
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Definition
The vascular bundles are surrounded by a special type of mesophyll cell which are collectively called the bundle sheath |
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Term
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Definition
DDM values are calculated using the equation DDM% = 88.9 – (ADF% x 0.779) |
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Term
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Definition
DMI (% of body weight) = 120/NDF% |
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Term
how to calculate Estimated Digestible Dry Matter (DDM) |
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Definition
Estimated Digestible Dry Matter = 88.9 – [0.779 x ADF(%)] |
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Term
how to calculate Estimated Dry Matter Intake (DMI) |
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Definition
Estimated Dry Matter Intake = 120 / NDF (%) |
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Term
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Definition
NFC%= 100% - [%NDF + %CP + %fat + %ash] |
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Term
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Definition
When crude protein, fat, water, ash, and fiber are added and the sum is subtracted from 100, the difference is NFE.
NFE = 100 –(CP + EE + CF + Ash + Moisture) |
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Term
how to calculate Relative Feed Value (RFV) |
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Definition
Relative Feed Value (RFV) = (DDM x DMI) / 1.29
RFV% = DDM (%) x DMI (% of body weight)/ 1.29 |
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Term
how to calculate digestion coeffecient of a nutrient |
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Definition
Digestion coefficient of a nutrient = 100 - (100 * ((% Indicator in feed * % Nutrient in feces) / (% Indicator in feces * % Nutrient in feed))) |
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Term
how to calculate digestion coeffecient of dry matter |
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Definition
Digestion coefficient of dry matter = 100 - (100 * (% Indicator in feed DM / % Indicator in fecal DM)) |
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Term
how to calculate dry matter digestibility |
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Definition
(kg dry matter intake - kg fecal dry matter)/(kg dry matter intake) |
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Term
how to calculate feed value |
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Definition
Feed value = nutritive value * physical aspects of the forage |
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Term
how to calculate nutrient digestibility |
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Definition
nutrient digestibility (%) = ((nutrient intake - nutrient in feces) / (nutrient intake)) * 100 |
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Term
how to calculate the digestibility of a nutrient in the test feed stuff being fed in form of mixed feed |
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Definition
Digestibility of nutrient in test feed (%) = ((A)- (B) (C) X 100)/(D)
A = Digestibility of nutrient in total diet B = Digestibility of nutrient in basal diet (usually already determined when fed alone C = proportion of total nutrient in diet supplied by basal diet D = proportion of total nutrient in diet supplied by test feed. |
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Term
how to calculate yield of a grass forage |
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Definition
Tiller Density x Weight = Yield |
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Term
how to estimate Net energy of lactation (Mcal/lb) (NEL) |
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Definition
NEL = 1.50 - (ADF% x 0.0267) |
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Term
how to properly sample hay |
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Definition
-use a good probe -sample at random -take enough core subsamples -use proper technique -handle samples correctly -split samples correctly |
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Term
hydrous oxides are oxides of... |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
cotyledon(s) remaining below ground |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
importance of carbohydrates in the dairy cow diet |
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Definition
Carbohydrates are the largest component in the dairy cow diet and contribute 60 to 70 percent of the net energy used for milk production. |
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Term
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Definition
flowering continues over a long period. |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
reference substance that is a natural constituent of the feed |
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Term
internal tolerance mechanisms |
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Definition
mechanisms that confer the ability to tolerate Al in the plant symplasm |
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Term
intravaginal tillers come from... |
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Definition
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Term
is bermudagrass a cool or warm season grass? |
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Definition
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Term
is kaolinite expanding or non-expanding? |
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Definition
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Term
is red clover annual or perennial? |
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Definition
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Term
is red clover determinate or indeterminate flowering? |
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Definition
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Term
is tall fescue a cool or warm season grass? |
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Definition
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Term
is white clover determinate or indeterminate flowering? |
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Definition
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Term
is red clover warm season or cool season? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
LAI = ratio of leaf area to land area |
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Term
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Definition
Phenolic compound in plant cell walls, esp. in older tissue |
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Term
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Definition
a material whose Ca and Mg compounds are capable of neutralizing soil acidity |
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Term
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Definition
wind transported; forms sand dunes |
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Term
minor species of annual clovers for the Southeast |
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Definition
-Subterranean (very common in Australia; good for low pH soils) -Berseem (very common in Europe and MidEast) -Rose -Ball -Persian -Hop |
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Term
major species of annual clovers for the Southeast |
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Definition
-Arrowleaf clover -Crimson clover |
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Term
maximum yield corresponds with... |
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Definition
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Term
methodology of Near Infrared Reflectance Spectroscopy (NIRS) in brief |
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Definition
1 – Evaluate reflectance of many samples 2 – Calibrate the reflectance based on wet chemistry 3 – Predict the values of samples not run with wet chemistry |
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Term
microscopic view of cellulose in a newly divided cell wall |
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Definition
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Term
microscopic view of secondary cell wall encasing primary cell wall |
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Definition
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Term
moisture of hay vs. damage caused by rain |
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Definition
the dryer the hay when rain occurs, the greater the damage |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
morphology of a legume flower |
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Definition
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Term
most labs have replaced aspects of the Proximate analysis system with... |
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Definition
modern analytical techniques |
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Term
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Definition
where two organisms co-exist, both benefiting from their relationship. |
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Term
nutritive value includes... |
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Definition
-Energy Value (from carbohydrates (starch, fructans, cellulose and other cell wall components)) -Crude Protein -Minerals |
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Term
one detail about the climate in the shrub/steppe region |
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Definition
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Term
one distinguishing characteristic of histosols |
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Definition
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Term
one function of the hypocotyl |
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Definition
helps bring it down into the soil |
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Term
one of the consequences of turning natural grasslands into arable land |
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Definition
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Term
one polysac you don't want in forages if you have a choice |
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Definition
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Term
one type of tall grass in the Midwest |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
The presence or absence of molds, dust, and odor |
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Term
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Definition
reduces forage growth and may thin forage stands |
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Term
parts of the plant cell that are completely digestible |
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Definition
the cell contents: -sugars -starches -fat -protein -NPN -pectins |
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Term
parts of the plant cell that are partly or completely indigestible |
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Definition
cell wall: -cell wall -hemicellulose -lignin -cellulose |
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Term
pasture forage usually includes... |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
how many years that plant is out there |
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Term
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Definition
the things attaching the leaves |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
picture of montmorillonite |
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Definition
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Term
plants that are high in crude fiber |
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Definition
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Term
plants that are low in crude fiber |
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Definition
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Term
plants with this type of p'synth tend to be shade intolerant |
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Definition
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Term
plants with this type of p'synth tend to dominate tropics |
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Definition
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Term
plants with this type of p'synth tend to not do well in tropics |
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Definition
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Term
plants with which type of p'synth have higher CO2 fixation point? |
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Definition
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Term
porosity vs. bulk density |
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Definition
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Term
productivity of individual species vs. species richness |
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Definition
Productivity of individual species goes down when there’s more species richness |
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Term
pros of the proximate analysis system |
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Definition
–Basic overview, useful for many years –Cheap –Rapid –Easily understood |
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Term
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Definition
grows laterally and covers soil surface |
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Term
proximate analysis doesn’t account for... |
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Definition
fecal, urine and gaseous losses. |
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Term
proximate analysis ignores... |
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Definition
palatability, digestibility, toxicity etc |
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Term
proximate analysis summary |
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Definition
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Term
range forage usually includes... |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
-Piedmont soils -Formed in place from the rock-derived parent material |
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Term
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Definition
macropores (coarse texture) |
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Term
secondary factors that influence forage quality |
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Definition
-soil fertility and fertilization -temperatures during forage growth -variety |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
size of stone and gravel particles |
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Definition
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Term
soemthing ammonia can be used for |
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Definition
synth of bacterial protein |
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Term
soil on which compaction is a problem |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
How particles are held together
Arrangement of soil particles into groupings (granular, blocky) |
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Term
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Definition
relative proportions of sand, silt, or clay
mineral particle size |
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Term
soil texture in which you need more lime |
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Definition
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Term
some Assumptions of Kjeldahl analysis |
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Definition
1.All proteins contain 16%N Hence uses constant ‘6.25’ to convert N to protein 2.All N in the food comes from true protein |
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Term
some Persistent White Clover for GA |
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Definition
-‘Durana’—Native ecotypes selected from GA pastures -‘Patriot’—Durana crossed to higher yielding ladino types -‘Regal’—NOT grazing tolerant ladino type but high yielding |
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Term
some agricultural things that acidify soil |
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Definition
-Soil acidification is intensified by the removal of cations through the harvesting of crops and by acid precipitation from polluted air. -Soil acidification is often accelerated by certain cropping practices such as repeated applications of nitrogen in amounts that exceed crop uptake. |
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Term
some alternative DM methods |
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Definition
-Correction equations -Freeze drying (lyophilizing ) -Slow, low temperature drying e.g. 55oC for 48 h |
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Term
some alternative moisture methods |
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Definition
-Toluene distillation -Karl Fischer Titration (The reference method) -Gas chromatography -Saponification |
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Term
some alternatives to CP methods to get the true protein values |
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Definition
1.Combustion methods (e.g. LECO analyzers) 2.Ninhydrin analysis 3.Trichloroacetic acid (TCA) precipitation 4.Colorimetric/ dye binding techniques |
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Term
some characteristics of kaolinite |
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Definition
-Compacted clay lattices -Held together by H bonds (-H….OH-) -Little movement of other ions in and out of interior surfaces -Creates thick particles |
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Term
some characteristics of montmorillonite |
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Definition
-2:1 expanding clay -Open clay lattices -Loosely held together by cations and water -A lot of movement of other things in and out of interior surfaces. |
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Term
some clover species for niche uses |
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Definition
-Cluster -Bigflower -Lappa -Striate -Rabbit foot -Maiden -Tomcat -Squarehead -Pin-point -Tree -Pinlole -Cup -Whitetip -Zigzag |
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Term
some cool season (C3) annuals |
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Definition
-wheat -rye -annual ryegrass |
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Term
some cool season (C3) perennials |
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Definition
-tall fescue -orchardgrass |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
some details about Annual lespedeza |
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Definition
-non bloating I think because of tannins -reseeding ability -low yield but high quality -acid soil and drought tolerance -grow best with good fertility |
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Term
some details about Bermudagrass |
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Definition
-Not native, it withstands harsh weather
-Low quality; it’s a C4 grass |
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Term
some details about Sericea lespedeza |
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Definition
-non bloating because of tannins -growth from axillary buds -intolerant of close grazing -acid soil and drought tolerance -reclamation/soil conservation uses |
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Term
some details about arrowleaf clover |
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Definition
-excellent reseeding ability -highest yielding annual clover -late spring/early summer growth can affect warm season grass under hay management |
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Term
some details about crimson clover |
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Definition
-easy to establish; early production -poor reseeding (low hard seed); hard seed seems to affect ease of germination; this can be overcome by vernalization, something like that; if sand paper scars the seed coat, this can help the seed germinate; hard seed was developed as a mechanism for survival, such that some stay in soil during harsh conditions, something like that -lower pH tolerance than arrowleaf -good for interseeding in warm season grasses |
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Term
some details about forage brassica |
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Definition
-Brassica forages are high quality, high yielding, fast growing crops that are suitable for livestock grazing. -Both tops (stems plus leaves) and roots (bulbs) can be grazed and are very nutritious. -Brassicas are very high in crude protein and energy, but extremely low in fiber. -Weight gains by feeder lambs have been 0.2 to 0.4 lbs/day and 1.5 to 2.0 lbs/day for stocker cattle. -Brassicas may best fit an early to late fall grazing program |
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Term
some details about forage chickory (Cichorium intybus) |
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Definition
-Member of the sunflower family (Asteraceae) -Perennial cool-season herb which originated in Central Europe but was developed for forage production in New Zealand. -Pure stands in New Zealand pastures yielded up to 22,300 pounds of dry matter per acre with crude protein content between 18 and 22 percent (comparable to annual ryegrass) and 62 to 77 % IVDMD. -Chicory is suited to well or moderately drained soils with a soil pH of 5.5 or greater -If chicory is grown without a legume partner, 100 to 150 lbs (N)/Acre should be applied in split applications: 1/3 at green up in early spring, 1/3 in early summer and 1/3 in early fall -At peak growth periods, chicory produced 73 pounds of forage per acre per day. -Maximum life of chicory stands with good quality will be about five to seven years -Chicory should be grazed heavily, leaving a stubble height of 11⁄2 to 2 inches, for short periods of time. -Intense grazing should prevent plants from bolting, which will extend the vegetative state and forage productivity. -A rest period of at least 25 to 30 days between grazings will allow chicory stand persistence and optimum performance. |
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Term
some details about high input management |
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Definition
-nutrients -water -overseeding -grazing |
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Term
some details about perennial peanut |
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Definition
-rhizoma peanut and pinto peanut -high quality -very slow establishment -grazing tolerant due to stolons |
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Term
some details about red clover |
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Definition
-Cool-season, perennial legume with hairy stems. -Stands last two to three years. -Erect, leafy plant that grows 2 to 3 feet tall. -Leaves are large and nearly always have a prominent V-shaped pattern, or watermark, on the leaflets. -Red clover has very hairy, fleshy stems and dark, pink flowers. -Red clover plants form crowns around a taproot and grow erect. -Uses: Hay, pasture, haylage. |
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Term
some differences between cool and warm season grasses in terms of quality |
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Definition
Cool-season species are generally higher in quality than warm-season grasses.
The digestibility of cool-season grass species averages about 9% higher than warm-season grasses.
Minimum crude protein levels found in warm-season grasses are also lower than those found in cool-season grasses.
Due to differences in leaf anatomy (tissue arrangement or structure),warm-season grasses convert sunlight into forage more efficiently than cool-season grasses, but their leaves contain a higher proportion of highly lignified, less digestible tissues. |
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Term
some environmental things that acidify soil |
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Definition
-High rainfall affects the rate of soil acidification depending on the rate of water percolation through the soil profile.
-Organic matter decaying to form carbonic acid and other weak acids also contributes to acidification.
-hydrolyzation of Al
-Net H+ production occurs through natural processes such as nitrification of ammonical nitrogen. |
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Term
some external tolerance mechanisms by plant roots against Al |
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Definition
1) exudation of organic acids 2) immobilization at the cell wall 3) exudation of phosphate 4) active Al efflux across the plasma membrane 5) production of root mucilage 6) Al exclusion via alterations in rhizosphere pH 7) selective permeability of the plasma membrane |
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Term
some factors of forage that determine animal performance |
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Definition
-feed availability -feed nutrient content -intake -extent of digestion -metabolism of the feed digested
especially availability and inteke |
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Term
some factors that affect digestibility |
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Definition
-feed intake -particle size -chemical composition -feed processing -climate -age -exercise |
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Term
some factors that influence forage quality |
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Definition
-palatability -intake -digestibility -nutrient content -anti-quality factors -animal performance |
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Term
some factors to consider when growing forage plants |
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Definition
-Water -Nutrients -Atmospheric gases -Sunlight -Temperature |
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Term
some forages that are determinate |
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Definition
red clover and some soybean |
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Term
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Definition
-Anchor medium for plants; provides support to the plant -Water reservoir for plant growth -Exchange site for nutrients required for plant growth |
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Term
some hormones in the seed that counteract each other |
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Definition
Gibberellic acid and abscisic acid counteract each other |
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Term
some important characteristics of soil |
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Definition
-Texture -Structure -Cation exchange capacity -Water holding capacity -Depth -Parent material -Tolerance of animal or equipment traffic |
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Term
some info about Colorimetric/ dye binding techniques |
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Definition
–Lowry method, Bio-rad, Bradford’s assay etc. –Involve reactions between peptide N, or acidic or basic aas with a dye –Measure soluble/availableN –Appropriateness for forages with fiber / tannin bound N –Results may depend on particle size and peptide size, presence of reagents that interfere with the reaction |
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Term
some info about Combustion methods (e.g. LECO analyzers) |
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Definition
–Based on the Dumas (1831) Combustion method –Sample N burnt to elemental N; measured by thermal conductivity
Pros: –More repeatable/ precise, (error = 0.9 vs 0.14 for kjeldahl) –No reagents; less hazardous, –1.5-2% better estimates of sample N –Quicker; easier
Cons: –Small sample size problems (now solved) –May need dried sample (now solved) |
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Term
some info about Ninhydrin analysis |
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Definition
–Involves hydrolyzing protein to aas & –Adding ninhydrin which: –reacts with a-amino acids to produce a purple color. –Color intensityreflects amino acid concentration. –The test is sensitive but the reagent is difficult to prepare |
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Term
some info about Trichloroacetic acid (TCA) precipitation |
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Definition
–TCA precipitates protein in a liquid e.g. milk –Protein is filtered off, NPN is retained in filtrate –Maceration may be required to free fiber-boundprotein |
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Term
some internal tolerance mechanisms by plant roots against Al |
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Definition
-Al-binding proteins -chelation in the cytosol -compartmentation in the vacuole -evolution of Al tolerant enzymes -elevated enzyme activity |
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Term
some limitations that make forages not reach their genetic potential |
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Definition
-physiological limitations -pest limitations |
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Term
some livestock enterprises in improved pastures |
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Definition
-cow/calf -stocker -dairy -equine |
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Term
some macronutrients of interest in soil |
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Definition
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|
Term
some materials other than lime that are used to neutralize soil acidity |
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Definition
-marl -slag from iron and steel making -flue dust from cement plants -refuse from sugar beet factories, paper mills, calcium carbide plants, rock wool plants, and water softening plants |
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Term
some members of the brassica family |
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Definition
-kale -forage rape -turnips -swedes |
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Term
some methods for screening for Al tolerance |
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Definition
-cell and tissue culture -nutrient solution culture -soil bioassays -field evaluations -Laboratory- and greenhouse-based techniques for screening for Al tolerance -field-based techniques |
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Term
some micronutrients of interest in soil |
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Definition
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|
Term
some nitrogenous compounds in plants |
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Definition
-Nucleic Acids (DNA/RNA) -Cell Wall Proteins -Nitrogenous Lipids -Ammonium Salts -Secondary Compounds -Free Amino Acids -Peptides -Protein |
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Term
some non-structural carbohydrates in grasses |
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Definition
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|
Term
some other things that can reduce forage quality after harvest |
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Definition
Quality losses also occur due to weathering, plant respiration, and microbial activity during storage. |
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|
Term
some oven drying methods in the proximate analysis system |
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Definition
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|
Term
some physical properties of soil |
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Definition
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|
Term
some plants that are good for livestock |
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Definition
Lots of alfalfa and forage and such are good for livestock |
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Term
some plants that have panicles |
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Definition
-rice -tall fescue and some other forages |
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|
Term
some problems that can occur with forages after harvest |
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Definition
Leaf shatter, plant respiration, and leaching by rainfall during field drying of hay can significantly reduce forage quality, particularly with legumes. |
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Term
some problems wigth EE assay |
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Definition
-Assumed to represent ‘high energy’ components i.e. true fat & oil content (2.5 x energy of carbs) -Includes complex lipids that are low in energy +E.g. waxes, pigments, fat-soluble vitamins, sterols -Some are not digestiblee.g. waxes -May include protein & other ether-soluble, non fat compounds e.g. chlorophyll, resins etc. |
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Term
some problems with CF assays |
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Definition
-Contains some lignin, cellulose, & hemicellulose -Excludes some fiber fractions +(included in NFE fraction) +Cellulose, lignin -Doesn’t reflect the different types of fiber e.g. cellulose, hemicellulose, lignin |
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|
Term
some problems with CP assays |
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Definition
Determined by Kjeldahlanalysis which: –Ignores nitrates –Does not indicate unavailable fiber-bound / heat damaged protein –Is based on some questionable assumptions |
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|
Term
some problems with NFE calculation |
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Definition
-Not directly measured, calculated by difference -NFE is a very vague measure of several constituents -It should estimate non-fiber carbohydrates but does not do this accurately -Often includes cell wallcomponentsMay be less digestible than CF -Transfer errors |
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Term
some problems with ash assays |
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Definition
-Excludes volatile mineralseg. I & Se, Cl & Zn -May include sand & other inorganic elementsof organic origin e.g. P & S from proteins -Doesn’t identify individual minerals -Use atomic absorption spectrophotometer to accurately quantify minerals |
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Term
some problems with moisture assay |
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Definition
-Destructive -VFAs, NH3& alcohols lost during oven drying at 105°C -grainsOven-drying only measures physically boundwater -Drying above 60°C can create artifacts that hinder lignin, fiber & ADF analysis |
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Term
some properties of soil that can be affected by soil texture |
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Definition
-permeability to air -water holding capacity -nutrient holding capacity -compaction potential |
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Term
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Definition
-Alfalfa -Red clover -White clover -Lespedezas -Annual clovers |
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|
Term
some things a good forage system will do |
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Definition
-Match animal nutritional needs throughout the year -Optimize animal production for forage produced -Produce environmental benefits -Provide wildlife cover and recreational opportunities |
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Term
some things about feed that factor into intake of a forage by an animal |
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Definition
-palatability attributes -physical properties -nutrient availability |
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|
Term
some things about management that factor into intake of a forage by an animal |
|
Definition
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|
Term
some things about the animal that factor into intake of a forage by an animal |
|
Definition
-capacity -appetite (energy demand) |
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|
Term
some things adequate animal nutrition is essential for |
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Definition
-high rates of gain -ample milk production -efficient reproduction -adequate profits |
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|
Term
some things that can cause clay hard pans |
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Definition
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|
Term
some things that can make hay lose its bright green color |
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Definition
-leaching -mold growth that causes bleaching -Baling at moisture contents at or above 20 to 25% may cause high bale temperatures that result in tan to brown or black colors (commonly called “tobacco hay”). |
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|
Term
some things that factor into intake of forages by the animal |
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Definition
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|
Term
some things that often cause major losses in forage quality |
|
Definition
poor storage and feeding techniques |
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|
Term
some things to consider when evaluating hay |
|
Definition
-plant species -maturity -leafiness -texture -color -odor -dusty -foreign matter |
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Term
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Definition
-Perennial peanut -Aeschynomene -Stylo -Desmodium -Leucaena |
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|
Term
|
Definition
-Aeschynomene -Perennial peanut -Desmodium -Leucaena -Stylosanthes |
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|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
-silicate clays -hydrous oxides |
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|
Term
|
Definition
-Sericea lespedeza -Annual lespedeza |
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|
Term
some types of silicate clays |
|
Definition
-kaolinite -illite -montmorillonite |
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|
Term
some types of soil particles |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
some types of white cover |
|
Definition
-small leaves (White Dutch type) -medium leaves -large leaves (Ladino type) |
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|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
some warm season (C4) annuals |
|
Definition
-pearl millet -sorghum/Sudan |
|
|
Term
some warm season (C4) perennials |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
something N fertilization does for forage quality |
|
Definition
Fertilization of grasses with nitrogen (N) often substantially increases yield and also generally increases CP levels in the forage. |
|
|
Term
something OM can improve in clays |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
something OM can improve in sands |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
something about Brassicas, such as rape and canola |
|
Definition
potential, but unproven in GA |
|
|
Term
something about Durana white clover |
|
Definition
very competitive because it has so many stolons, making it hard to kill; this is the version of white clover used by Dr. Hill in living mulch |
|
|
Term
something about Regal white clover |
|
Definition
it’s a ladino type; not very persistent |
|
|
Term
something about forage chickory |
|
Definition
drought tolerant succulent forb |
|
|
Term
something about plants that is important for pasture management |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
something about the type of white clover that has large leaves (Ladino type) |
|
Definition
-high yield -poor grazing tolerance |
|
|
Term
something about the type of white clover that has medium leaves |
|
Definition
best combination of yield and grazing tolerance
In a breeding program, this is what we focus on because we try to get characteristics of both small and large, something like that |
|
|
Term
something about the type of white clover that has small leaves (White Dutch type) |
|
Definition
-low yield -excellent grazing tolerance |
|
|
Term
something bad that rainfall can do to legumes after harvest |
|
Definition
Rainfall during curing damages legume leaves most. |
|
|
Term
something dead animals can do to ruin a bale of forage |
|
Definition
Dead animals in hay can cause botulism, a deadly disease that can kill farm animals. |
|
|
Term
something done with red clover that may cause the fungus that causes slobbering to get in there |
|
Definition
Overmature second cutting red clover hay may have the fungus that causes animals to slobber |
|
|
Term
something legumes can cause in animals |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
something that can happen to red clover that can cause slobbering |
|
Definition
Slobbering is associated with black patch disease caused by a fungus that is a plant pathogen of red clover
Causes slobbering in horses and can kill by dehydration |
|
|
Term
something you can't expect w/o soil OM |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
spacing of bundle sheaths in warm season grasses |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
starch and cellulose are made of glucose, but cellulose is harder to digest. why is that? |
|
Definition
because of the way it’s packed; chair conformation |
|
|
Term
structure of a 1:1 clay like kaolinite |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
structure of hemicellulose |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
structure of illite as it relates to cations |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
structure of montmorillonite |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
structure of montmorillonite as it pertains to cations |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
surface area per g of clay |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
surface area per g of sand |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
surface area per g of silt |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the 3 most important polysacs in terms of forage quality |
|
Definition
-cellulose -hemicellulose -lignin |
|
|
Term
the 5 factors of soil formation |
|
Definition
-Parent material -Climate -Living organisms -Topography -Time |
|
|
Term
the Van Soest fiber analysis system |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the amount of cell walls vs. maturity |
|
Definition
As the plant matures, the amount of cell walls increases |
|
|
Term
the amount of the world's ice-free land that has acid soil |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the analysis that gives you more details and a better indication of performance |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the best time to clip a forage |
|
Definition
might be during the early part of the transition phase |
|
|
Term
the biggest growth opportunities for improved pastures in Georgia |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the bloom we target in alfalfa |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the cells in C4 plants that have rubisco |
|
Definition
The bundle sheath cells have Rubisco and fix CO2 just like in C3 plants |
|
|
Term
the clay in typical Georgia soil |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the clay in typical Illinois soil |
|
Definition
1‑2% kaolinite 60% montmorillonite 35‑38% illite 0% hydrous oxides |
|
|
Term
the clover being used in Dr. Hill's living mulch |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the composition of glucose |
|
Definition
1 sucrose attached to 1 fructose |
|
|
Term
the critical light interception |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the critical site on the root for Al toxicity |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the dairies that are more environmentally friendly |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the developmental stages of grasses |
|
Definition
1: germination 2: vegetative 3: elongation 4: reproduction 5: seed development and ripening |
|
|
Term
the dicot embryo compared to the plant |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the dominant species of cash hay in Georgia |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the effect of fertilization on the digestible energy of forage |
|
Definition
fertilization usually has little or no effect on the digestible energy of forage |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the final stage of the decomposition of organic matter |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the forage that's highest in nutrients |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the forages you should focus on and why |
|
Definition
Focus on alfalfa, red clover, and white clover because they are the most common you will find in Georgia |
|
|
Term
the four major components of soils |
|
Definition
-Minerals ‑Organic Matter ‑Water ‑Air |
|
|
Term
the function of crude fiber (CF) |
|
Definition
structural and protective parts of plants |
|
|
Term
the grazing program that may be best for brassicas |
|
Definition
Brassicas may best fit an early to late fall grazing program |
|
|
Term
the growth habit of alfalfa |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the growth habit of red clover |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the growth habit of white clover |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the hairy stuff on red clover |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the ideal amount of acres per cow/calf pair |
|
Definition
You want somewhere around 1-1.5 acres per cow/calf pair |
|
|
Term
the impact of maturity on cell wall c'tration |
|
Definition
the, more mature, the more lignin in the cell walls |
|
|
Term
the importance of OM in the biological sense |
|
Definition
-stimulates macro- and microorganism growth and function -indirectly affects plant nutrition |
|
|
Term
the importance of OM in the nutritional sense |
|
Definition
directly as source of nutrients |
|
|
Term
the importance of OM in the physical sense |
|
Definition
-improves soil structure – greater aggregate stability, improved porosity, greater aeration, better water holding capacity, improved infiltration -improves soil cation exchange capacity |
|
|
Term
the importance of anionic salts in animal feed |
|
Definition
Anionic salts are nutritionally important in dry cow rations to aid in the prevention of milk fever. |
|
|
Term
the light frequency used by Near Infrared Reflectance Spectroscopy (NIRS) |
|
Definition
Infrared spectrum = ~780 – 2500 nm, just above visible spectrum |
|
|
Term
the limitations of using a metabolism crate to measure metabolism ofan animal |
|
Definition
-The metabolism period requires a minimum of 7 days faecal / urine collection, -May need to be varied for specific purposes but should not exceed 10 days for cattle over 400 kg confined to crates. -Feed intake is generally determined 24 hours prior to the collection period given the lag between feed eaten, and urine / faeces excreted. Hav e to start here because the forage takes about 24 hours to go thru the system. -The total length of time an animal is confined to the metabolism crate is generally no longer than 14 days, |
|
|
Term
the main concern in forage management and why |
|
Definition
the growing point because it determines if the species is grazing tolerant or not |
|
|
Term
the most important factor determining forage quality of a given species |
|
Definition
Maturity stage at harvest |
|
|
Term
the most important factor to the low fertility of acid soil |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the most important factors influencing forage quality |
|
Definition
-forage species -stage of maturity at harvest -(for stored forages) harvesting and storage methods |
|
|
Term
the most important nutrient for grasses |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the most limiting factor of nutritive content of a forage |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the most reliable method of measuring a feed's digestibility |
|
Definition
The total collection (conventional digestion trial)
however, this is tedious and time consuming |
|
|
Term
the mutual relationship between legumes and Rhizobium bacteria |
|
Definition
-Bacteria provides plant with N and plant provides bacteria with nutrients -If their environment is deficient in N, then they fix soil atmospheric N into the plant. C skeletons from photosynthesis provide structures for amino acids. |
|
|
Term
the nodules on legume roots that are active |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the non structural carbs are... |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the non-structural carbohydrate found in C4 grasses |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the only reasonable solution to the problem of acid subsoil |
|
Definition
Selection and development of genotypes with enhanced tolerance to acid soils and toxic levels of Al |
|
|
Term
the original purpose for soybean in the U.S. |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the overall chem rxn of p'synth |
|
Definition
6CO2 + 12H2O --> C6H12O6 + 6O2 + 6H2O
the rxn is accompanied by light and plant enzymes |
|
|
Term
the pH that constitutes acid soils |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the part of grasses we're interested in and why |
|
Definition
the crown area because that’s where the growth occurs |
|
|
Term
the part of the corn root that must be exposed to Al to be affected by Al toxicity |
|
Definition
the terminal 2 to 3 mm of the root (root cap and meristem) |
|
|
Term
the part of the proximate analysis summary where you got fats |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the plant enzyme involved in the overall chem rxn for p'synth |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the plumule becomes the... |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the portion of the feed that can be taken up by the animal |
|
Definition
portion which is soluble or is rendered soluble by hydrolysis or some other chemical or physical change |
|
|
Term
the predominant shrub out West |
|
Definition
alitrax, which is not that great for livestock |
|
|
Term
the proximate analysis summary reveals... |
|
Definition
the dry matter and moisture |
|
|
Term
the radicle becomes the... |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the red clover seed to avoid |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the relationship between forage legumes and pH |
|
Definition
very dependent on pH; alfalfa tends to produce better at pH 6.5-7.5 |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the size of the desired red clover variety |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the soil texture triangle |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the stage of growth where most hay actually is harvested |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the stage of growth where most hay should be harvested |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the stages of alfalfa growth |
|
Definition
1: vegetative 2: flower bud development 3: flowering 4: seed production |
|
|
Term
the structure of kaolinite as it relates to cations |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the texture typical Georgia soil has |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the type of bee you have to use for pollination of alfalfa |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the type of forage forage chickory is |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the type of forage that produces better quality and why |
|
Definition
Legumes generally produce higher quality forage than grasses.This is because legumes usually have less fiber and favor higher intake than grasses. |
|
|
Term
the type of grasslands that have more species diversity |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the type of non-structural carbohydrate found in cool season (C3) annuals such as wheat, rye, and annual ryegrass |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the type of non-structural carbohydrate found in cool season (C3) perennials such as tall fescue and orchardgrass |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the type of non-structural carbohydrate found in warm season (C4) annuals such as pearl millet and sorghum/Sudan |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the type of non-structural carbohydrate found in warm season (C4) perennials such as Bermuda and bahia |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the type of texture typical Illinois soil has |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the type of tissue where C3 p'synth happens in all leaf tissue |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the ultimate test of forage quality |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the very nutritious parts of forage brassica that can be grazed |
|
Definition
Both tops (stems plus leaves) and roots (bulbs) |
|
|
Term
the way pollination works in legumes |
|
Definition
A lot of legumes can’t self-pollinate; they’re cross-pollinators |
|
|
Term
the way the ovary is in legumes and why |
|
Definition
the ovary is elongated to get a pod |
|
|
Term
thestage of growth where forage quality tends to be highest |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
things that can affect leafiness of hay |
|
Definition
Leafiness can be affected by plant species, by stage of maturity at harvest, and (especially in legume hays) by handling that results in leaf loss. |
|
|
Term
this balance has something to do with grass tetany |
|
Definition
The balance between Ca, P, and Mg has something to do with grass tetany |
|
|
Term
this decreases the digestibility of alfalfa |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
this determines the nutritive value of a plant |
|
Definition
The parts of the plant that are digestible determine the nutritive value of the plant |
|
|
Term
this drives the components of the forage-livestock system |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
this is considered the most important growth-limiting factor for plants in acid soils |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
this is needed for crops to be resistant to Al |
|
Definition
To breed genotypes with improved Al tolerance, reliable, efficient screening methods must be available to the researcher. |
|
|
Term
this is often the most effective strategy for improving crop production on acid soils. |
|
Definition
combining the use of Al tolerant cultivars with liming, since the application of lime is often not economically or physically feasible |
|
|
Term
this is required to provide the information needed to formulate animal rations. |
|
Definition
Accurate laboratory testing of feed and forage |
|
|
Term
this part of the plant is important for regrowth |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
this places the greatest nutrient demand on animals |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
this state is considered the grass seed capital of the world |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
number of tillers per square foot |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
the vegetative structures coming from the lateral buds of the apex |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
-Coastal plains, river beds -Particles are transported from their origin to a new geographic location |
|
|
Term
type of grasses fructans are not found in |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
types of aluminum tolerance mechanisms |
|
Definition
-external tolerance mechanisms -internal tolerance mechanisms |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
-Cow/calf -Grassfed finishing |
|
|
Term
types of cash hay in Georgia |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
types of dairy in Georgia |
|
Definition
-Confinement -Grazing-based |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
lowers overall forage quality and increases forage waste |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
a period of cool temperatures |
|
|
Term
water's role in forming soil |
|
Definition
The hydraulic effects of flowing water, such as in rivers and streams, will break down rocks to parent material for soil formation. |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
It is used to compare varieties, match hay/silage inventories to animals, and to market hay |
|
|
Term
what Rhizobium bacteria uses to fix N |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
what acid detergent fiber (ADF) is used for in detergent fiber analysis |
|
Definition
ADF primarily represents cellulose and lignin |
|
|
Term
what alfalfa mosaic virus can do to white clover |
|
Definition
it can wipe out a stem in a few days |
|
|
Term
what can happen to the leaves and roots if you clip too low? |
|
Definition
you affect the leaf and root growth at the same time |
|
|
Term
what causes a nodule to form in a legume root? |
|
Definition
cortical cells multiplying out of control |
|
|
Term
what causes permanent cementing? |
|
Definition
humus from organic matter |
|
|
Term
what causes temporary cementing? |
|
Definition
-bacterial gums -fungal mycelium |
|
|
Term
what determines when a plant flowers? |
|
Definition
Photoperiod and temperature |
|
|
Term
what does the primary stem in red clover do instead of elongate? |
|
Definition
it produces axillary shoots |
|
|
Term
what fertilizing with N does to grasses and forages |
|
Definition
Fertilizing with nitrogen generally increases the crude protein level of grasses, but fertilization usually has little or no effect on the digestible energy of forage. |
|
|
Term
what grasses and legumes each contribute to a forage program |
|
Definition
Grasses supply energy and legumes supply protein |
|
|
Term
what happens if you cut the apex of an annual grass? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
what happens if you don't till the soil after alfalfa has been there? |
|
Definition
the allelopathic chemicals stay in the soil |
|
|
Term
what happens to excess carbohydrate when p'synth exceeds the needs of growth and resp? |
|
Definition
it is stored as starch or fructan |
|
|
Term
what happens to intake potential and NDF c'tration as plants age? |
|
Definition
Intake potential decreases and NDF concentration increases as plants age. This is because NDF is more difficult to digest than the non-fiber components of forage. |
|
|
Term
what happens to lower leaves when plant LAI exceeds 95%? |
|
Definition
the lower leaves get shaded and senesce – therefore, harvest at this point |
|
|
Term
what happens to the carbohydrates formed in leaves by net p'synth? |
|
Definition
they are translocated as sucrose to other parts of the plant |
|
|
Term
what happens to the organic stuff when you burn organic matter? |
|
Definition
When you burn organic matter, the organic stuff goes away, leaving behind minerals |
|
|
Term
what happens to the ovary in legume flowers? |
|
Definition
becomes a pod containing 2-3 seeds (this happens in peanuts) |
|
|
Term
what holds the sheets of montmorillonite together? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
what hydrated cations do to montmorillonite |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
what is the keel in legume dicot flowers? |
|
Definition
2 fused petals (encloses ovary and stamens) |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
what large cations do to montmorillonite |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
what legumes store in seed |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
what legumes store in their cotyledons |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
what makes legumes unique |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
what makes the cotyledons go above the soil in epigeal germination? |
|
Definition
the hypocotyl pushes the cotyledons up |
|
|
Term
what minerals define soil pH? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
what monocots store in their endosperm |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
what most acid soils are found under |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
what most cool-season grasses require for flowering |
|
Definition
a period of cool temperatures (vernalization) |
|
|
Term
what neutral detergent fiber (NDF) is used for in detergent fiber analysis |
|
Definition
NDF approximates the total cell wall constituents including hemicellulose |
|
|
Term
what oven drying measures |
|
Definition
DM c'tration, not moisture c'tration |
|
|
Term
what plants do when they are stressed |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
what really matters in terms of the yield of a forage |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
what red clover grows from |
|
Definition
grows from crowns like alfalfa does |
|
|
Term
what tall fescue will do if you don't harvest it at peak yield |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
what the Near Infrared Reflectance Spectroscopy (NIRS) method of analyzing forages analyzes for |
|
Definition
relationships between particular wavelengths and certain components, such as NDF |
|
|
Term
what the detergent does in the Van Soest fiber analysis system |
|
Definition
The detergent breaks apart the cell wall because the content of the cell can’t be accessed unless you digest the cell wall |
|
|
Term
what the inoculant used in red clover is |
|
Definition
a mix of bacteria in a powder |
|
|
Term
what the proximate analysis summary is used for |
|
Definition
it is used a lot, especially for concentrates |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
what tiller weight and number of tillers do above genetic potential |
|
Definition
Above the genetic potential, the tiller weight will increase, but the number of tillers won’t |
|
|
Term
what tillers do when plant grows tham |
|
Definition
switch from vegetative to reproductive growth |
|
|
Term
what to do when a forage is no longer productive |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
what too little fiber does to lactating dairy animals |
|
Definition
too little fiber reduces production of fat-corrected milk, increases fattening of the female, and increases incidence of digestive and metabolic disorders |
|
|
Term
what too much compaction does to soil |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
what too much fiber does to lactating dairy animals |
|
Definition
lowers energy density and limits intake, resulting in low milk production |
|
|
Term
what warm season grasses do in response to day shortening and why |
|
Definition
Warm season grasses go dormant when they sense day shortening because they’re not able to tolerate cold |
|
|
Term
what we focus on with white clover in a breeding program and why |
|
Definition
getting the characteristics of both small and large, something like that |
|
|
Term
what will grass rely on for regrowth if it's perennial? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
what's happening to this clover? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
what's in parentheses (number 1)? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
what's number 1 (type of seed)? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Vascular bundles with bundle sheath |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Vascular bundles with bundle sheath |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
when Bermudagrass is dormant |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
when adjusted crude protein is used |
|
Definition
Used in place of CP when ADIN makes up more than 10 percent of the CP content of a feed. |
|
|
Term
when ammonia is produced in an animal |
|
Definition
it is produced as protein and nonprotein nitrogen degrades or breaks down in the rumen |
|
|
Term
when cool season grasses reproduce |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
when fescue provides forage |
|
Definition
when Bermudagrass is dormant |
|
|
Term
when hydrous oxides persist in soils |
|
Definition
after silica has leached out |
|
|
Term
when most cool-season grasses produce reproductive stems and why |
|
Definition
spring because they require vernalization for flowering |
|
|
Term
when soil bioassays have a distinct advantage over nutrient solution culture |
|
Definition
when Al tolerance may be influenced by soil dependent external factors |
|
|
Term
when the crude protein (CP) value is not applicable |
|
Definition
should be used with some care, as it is not applicable to non-ruminants or when high levels of nitrate are present in the forage. |
|
|
Term
when warm season grasses have their peak |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
when warm season grasses reproduce |
|
Definition
when the days get shorter |
|
|
Term
when you need to supplement feed |
|
Definition
at the point of lowest energy |
|
|
Term
when you want your red clover to mature and why |
|
Definition
Choose either early or medium maturity because you want to harvest it before Bermudagrass sets in |
|
|
Term
wher red clover develops the crown |
|
Definition
Red clover plants form crowns around a taproot and grow erect. |
|
|
Term
where a plant's primary response to Al stress occurs |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
where cool season (C3) annuals such as wheat, rye, and annual ryegrass store their fructan |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
where cool season (C3) perennials such as tall fescue and orchardgrass store their fructan |
|
Definition
-stem bases -rhizomes -stolons |
|
|
Term
where growth respiration occurs |
|
Definition
mainly in areas of cell division or expansion |
|
|
Term
where histosols are often found |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
where the structural carbs are |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
where warm season (C4) annuals such as pearl millet and sorghum/Sudan store their fructose |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
where warm season (C4) perennials such as Bermuda and bahia store their starch |
|
Definition
-stem bases -rhizomes -stolons |
|
|
Term
which cell wall is more important and why? |
|
Definition
The secondary cell wall is more important because it makes the frame in general. |
|
|
Term
which element is number 10? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which element is number 11? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which element is number 12? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which element is number 13? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which element is number 1? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which element is number 2? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which element is number 3? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which element is number 4? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which element is number 5? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which element is number 6? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which element is number 7? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which element is number 8? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which element is number 9? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which fats tend to have less detrimental effects on rumen fermentation? |
|
Definition
saturated fats tend to have less detrimental effects on rumen fermentation than unsaturated fats |
|
|
Term
which forages tend to be more digestable? C3 or C4? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which has a highe protein content? alfalfa or forage chickory? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which has higher protein? grasses or legumes? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which is more digestible overall, alfalfaor red clover? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which is more mobile in the p'synthetic machinery? malate or OAA? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which leaves are higher in quality: green or dead? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of cellulose is number 1? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of cellulose is number 2? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of cellulose is number 3? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of cellulose is number 4? [image] |
|
Definition
chains of cellulose molecules |
|
|
Term
which part of the C4 plant leaf is number 1?
[image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the C3 plant leaf is number 1?
[image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the C4 plant leaf is number 2?
[image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the C3 plant leaf is number 2?
[image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the C4 plant leaf is number 3?
[image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the C3 plant leaf is number 3?
[image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the C4 plant leaf is number 4?
[image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the C3 plant leaf is number 4?
[image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the dicot seed is number 10? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the dicot seed is number 2? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the dicot seed is number 3? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the dicot seed is number 4? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the dicot seed is number 5? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the dicot seed is number 6? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the dicot seed is number 7? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the dicot seed is number 8? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the dicot seed is number 9? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the forage legume has the most protein? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the forage plant is highest in quality: leaves or stems? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the germinated legume seed is number 1? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the germinated legume seed is number 2? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the germinated legume seed is number 3? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the germinated legume seed is number 4? [image] |
|
Definition
radicle with secondary roots |
|
|
Term
which part of the grass blade is number 1? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the grass blade is number 2? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the grass blade is number 3? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the grass blade is number 4? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the grass blade is number 5? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the grass plant is number 10? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the grass plant is number 11? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the grass plant is number 12? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the grass plant is number 13? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the grass plant is number 14? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the grass plant is number 1? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the grass plant is number 1? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the grass plant is number 1? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the grass plant is number 2? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the grass plant is number 2? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the grass plant is number 2? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the grass plant is number 3? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the grass plant is number 3? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the grass plant is number 3? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the grass plant is number 4? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the grass plant is number 4? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the grass plant is number 4? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the grass plant is number 5? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the grass plant is number 5? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the grass plant is number 5? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the grass plant is number 6? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the grass plant is number 6? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the grass plant is number 6? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the grass plant is number 7? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the grass plant is number 7? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the grass plant is number 7? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the grass plant is number 8? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the grass plant is number 8? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the grass plant is number 9? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the grass seedling is number 1? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the grass seedling is number 2? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the grass seedling is number 3? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the grass seedling is number 4? [image] |
|
Definition
subcoleoptile internode roots |
|
|
Term
which part of the grass seedling is number 5? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the grass seedling is number 6? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the grass seedling is number 7? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the legume seed is number 1? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the legume seed is number 2? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the legume seed is number 3? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the legume seed is number 4? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the legume seed is number 5? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the legume seed is number 6? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the legume seed is number 7? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the monocot seed is number 10? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the monocot seed is number 11? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the monocot seed is number 1? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the monocot seed is number 2? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the monocot seed is number 2? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the monocot seed is number 3? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the monocot seed is number 3? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the monocot seed is number 4? [image] |
|
Definition
plumule (shoot w/ leaf primordia) |
|
|
Term
which part of the monocot seed is number 4? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the monocot seed is number 5? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the monocot seed is number 5? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the monocot seed is number 6? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the monocot seed is number 6? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the monocot seed is number 7? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the monocot seed is number 7? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the monocot seed is number 8? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the monocot seed is number 9? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the plant cell wall is number 1? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the plant cell wall is number 2? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the plant cell wall is number 3? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the plant cell wall is number 4? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which part of the plant cell wall is number 5? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which soil has more organic matter? that under grasslands or that under forests? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which soil is more acidic and more leached? forested or grassland? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which soil texture is number 10? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which soil texture is number 11? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which soil texture is number 12? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which soil texture is number 1? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which soil texture is number 2? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which soil texture is number 3? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which soil texture is number 4? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which soil texture is number 5? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which soil texture is number 6? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which soil texture is number 7? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which soil texture is number 8? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which soil texture is number 9? [image] |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which tolerates acidity better, alfalfa or red clover? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which tyope of grass has longer growing season? cool season or warm season? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which type of respiration is of higher priority: maintenance or growth? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
why Al is a problem in soil |
|
Definition
because it's toxic to plants |
|
|
Term
why C3 grasses tend to have higher nutritive value than C4 grasses |
|
Definition
because the C3 grasses have more mesophyll and less fiber; the mesophyll cells have lots of protein |
|
|
Term
why C3 tends to shut down at 86°F or 68°F |
|
Definition
because stomata close up due to water becoming a limiting factor |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
-Silicate clays and humus are negatively charged -Therefore, positively charged ions (cations) will bind -If these ions are not bound too tightly, they can be exchanged with the soil solution and made available to plants |
|
|
Term
why Cecil soil aggregates better than Tifton soil |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
why Durana white clover is very competitive and hard to kill |
|
Definition
because it has so many stolons, making it hard to kill |
|
|
Term
why H bonds are strong enough between sheets of clay |
|
Definition
because they're very small |
|
|
Term
why K can get into illite, but larger cations can't |
|
Definition
because the clay lattices are close enough such that larger ions and water can not move in and out |
|
|
Term
why Tifton soil is yellow |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
why a metabolism crate is not a good way to measure metabolism of an animal |
|
Definition
This affects results because the animal is used to roaming free and the confinement stresses them out, affecting the metabolism |
|
|
Term
why alfalfa is drought tolerant |
|
Definition
because of its deep tap root |
|
|
Term
why alfalfa is higher in protein than Timothy grass |
|
Definition
because Alfalfa is a legume |
|
|
Term
why alfalfa is not very effective in the SE |
|
Definition
because of such acid soils |
|
|
Term
why cellulose and hemicellulose can be partly digested |
|
Definition
Cellulose and hemicellulose are partly digested, thanks to microbes and such |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
because it makes it hard for plants; problem on clay soil |
|
|
Term
why concentrates need to be reduced |
|
Definition
because concentrates are more expensive than forages |
|
|
Term
why crude protein is used when analyzing animal feed |
|
Definition
because rumen microbes can convert non-protein nitrogen to microbial protein, which can then be used by the animal. |
|
|
Term
why digestion slows dramatically as forage becomes more mature |
|
Definition
because the rate at which fiber is digested slows as plants mature |
|
|
Term
why dry matter yield peaks in March or spring |
|
Definition
because of the cool season forages |
|
|
Term
why feed is necessary for animals |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
why fiber increases as the plant matures |
|
Definition
because the amount of growth in the stems is higher |
|
|
Term
why good soil structure is important |
|
Definition
-adequate aeration -water permeability (low runoff and erosion) -good seedbed |
|
|
Term
why grass regrows more quickly under light defoliation |
|
Definition
because more stubble remains to supply more carbohydrates and for more p'synth, so the lag time befor growth following cutting is minimal |
|
|
Term
why grasses are important in the environmental protection of soils |
|
Definition
because grass roots hold soil in place, even sand |
|
|
Term
why grazing management can be extremely important |
|
Definition
to prevent overgrazing and undergrazing |
|
|
Term
why histosols have such high OM content |
|
Definition
because the flooded places they're found in have no air getting to the soil, such that the OM doesn’t decompose |
|
|
Term
why honeybees aren’t good pollinators for alfalfa |
|
Definition
because the pistil smacks it on the head, deterring it |
|
|
Term
why indeterminate flowering can be a disadvantage |
|
Definition
because it can make it hard to control pollination |
|
|
Term
why intercepting 100% of the light is undesireable |
|
Definition
because intercepting 100% implies shading of lower leaves |
|
|
Term
why is orchardgrass more digestible than Bermudagrass? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
why it may not be possible to develop winter active, grazing tolerant alfalfa in the South |
|
Definition
because selection for grazing tolerance tends to make alfalfa winter dormant again |
|
|
Term
why it's best to harvest at critical LAI |
|
Definition
because above this level, lower leaves shaded and senesce – therefore, harvest at this point |
|
|
Term
why it's good to use management practices that optimize N-use efficiency and ultimately reduce the amount of NO3- lost through leaching |
|
Definition
because they could slow the rate of acidification |
|
|
Term
why it's harder to make hay using red clover than with alfalfa |
|
Definition
because red clover has thinner stems |
|
|
Term
why it’s not worth it to grow warm season grasses in Mahattan, KS |
|
Definition
because of such a short growing season |
|
|
Term
why leafiness of hay is important |
|
Definition
because the higher the leaf content, the higher the forage quality |
|
|
Term
why legumes need rhizobia |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
why lignin is hard to break |
|
Definition
because of all the chains and no repeating structure |
|
|
Term
why lignin is hard to digest |
|
Definition
because it has no repeating structure |
|
|
Term
why many legumes have to be inoculated for N fixation |
|
Definition
because of not being native to the region |
|
|
Term
why mollisols are rich in OM |
|
Definition
because of the decay of grass roots and such |
|
|
Term
why nitrogenase doesn't like oxygen |
|
Definition
because oxygen would oxidize it |
|
|
Term
why nutrient requirements increase during the last third of pregnancy |
|
Definition
-rapidly increasing fetal weight -the need to store fat during pregnancy that will be used to meet the high-energy demand of early lactation |
|
|
Term
why pH is important in soil |
|
Definition
because it affects the solubility of elements in soil |
|
|
Term
why perennial peanut is grazing tolerant |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
why red clover can survive grazing |
|
Definition
because the apex and meristematic tissue are safe |
|
|
Term
why red clover needs to be inoculated with a specific inocculant |
|
Definition
because the bacteria needed aren’t native to here; neither is red clover |
|
|
Term
why residual leaf area is important |
|
Definition
because it needs to be able to grow back |
|
|
Term
why results on a forage test report vary somewhat |
|
Definition
because of differences within a hay lot (or other feed material sampled), sampling technique, and laboratory procedures |
|
|
Term
why sandy soils acidify more rapidly |
|
Definition
Sandy soils with relatively few clay particles acidify more rapidly due to their smaller reservoir of alkaline cations and higher leaching potential. |
|
|
Term
why seeds need a reserve to grow |
|
Definition
because they can’t directly pump nutrients yet |
|
|
Term
why soils under forests are acid in nature |
|
Definition
because of roots secreting acid |
|
|
Term
why soluble sugars are lowest in the morning and highest after a day of bright sunshine |
|
Definition
because plants accumulate soluble carbohydrates during daylight and then use them overnight |
|
|
Term
why some of the digestible stuff goes to the feces |
|
Definition
because of microbial cells (MC) and endogenous secretions (ES) |
|
|
Term
why soybean was brought to the US |
|
Definition
Soybean was brought to the US as a forage crop |
|
|
Term
why storage of carbs is important in plants |
|
Definition
Storage of carbs is important to growth of the plants |
|
|
Term
why the K in illite is not plant available |
|
Definition
because it’s part of the structure |
|
|
Term
why the Near Infrared Reflectance Spectroscopy (NIRS) can be used to analyze forages |
|
Definition
because different constituents in a forage consistently absorb or reflect different wavelengths |
|
|
Term
why the arrangement of particles into aggregates is important |
|
Definition
because this can form pores for water and air and channels connecting pores |
|
|
Term
why the digestibility of alfalfa goes down after May |
|
Definition
because it accumulates more fiber and lignin |
|
|
Term
why the forage is considered to be always changing |
|
Definition
because it doesn't stay at a constant stage of development |
|
|
Term
why the forage quality of legumes and some grasses, such as Bermudagrass, are less closely linked to season than cool-season grasses |
|
Definition
because they flower several times per season |
|
|
Term
why the forage quality of regrowth of cool-season grasses is greater and changes less over time |
|
Definition
because they have higher leaf-to-stem ratios than first-growth forage |
|
|
Term
why the hemicellulose is more digestible in younger plants than in older plants |
|
Definition
fewer side chains in younger plants |
|
|
Term
why the net p'synth of C3 plants is is limited at high irradiance |
|
Definition
because CO2 transport to rubisco is slower |
|
|
Term
why the number 6.25 is used for proteins |
|
Definition
because proteins have about 6.25% N |
|
|
Term
why the number of frost free days is important in forage selection |
|
Definition
because this is related to the needed hardiness and cold tolerance of the pants |
|
|
Term
why the protein content goes down as the plant matures |
|
Definition
because all the plant’s focus is on the flowers and influorescence |
|
|
Term
why the soil here is acid |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
why the technique used to sample forages is extremely important |
|
Definition
because a laboratory analysis uses only a few grams of material to represent tons of forage |
|
|
Term
why the water and air held in the macropores is more important |
|
Definition
because the water and air in the macropores is more accessible to plants |
|
|
Term
why the wilting coefficient is higher in clay soils than in sandy soils |
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because clay particles hold on to water more tightly than sand |
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why tropical perennial grasses are lower in quality |
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because of the distribution of bundle sheath cells |
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why we have to have multiple species in a forage program |
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because that maximizes yield [image] |
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why weather and climate are important variables in a forage system |
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because the choice of species is very important in that regard |
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why you don't have to worry too much about the persistence of white clover |
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because of stolons and its ability to reseed itself |
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why you don't wanna go beyond a certain age in forage plants |
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because if you go beyond it, there’s too much accumulation of lignin |
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why you might not wanna feed red clover to animals while the clover is still fresh |
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because the compound in there that causes slobbering decreases while in storage |
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why you want complementary forage species in a forage program |
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you want them for year around grazing or production |
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why you want grass/legume mixtures in a forage program |
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because they can decrease fertilizer costs while optimizing nutritive value and seasonal distribution of production |
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why you want the combined yield of tall fescue and clover to be high |
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the soil texture triangle |
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the leaves, stems, and flowers of red clover |
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