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Comparison of flail-harvested, precision-chopped and round-bale silages for growing beef cattle
Charmley, E ; Firth, S
Charmley, E
Firth, S
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2004
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E. Charmley, S. Firth. Comparison of flail-harvested, precision-chopped and round-bale silages for growing beef cattle. Irish Journal of Agricultural and Food Research, 43: 43-57, 2004
Abstract
The effects of silage conservation method on silage composition and animal performance
were examined in two experiments. In Experiment 1, unwilted, flail-chopped
silages made with or without an additive (sodium nitrite and hexamethylene tetramine)
were compared with wilted, round-bale silage. The dry matter (DM) concentration of
round bale silage (460 g/kg) was higher than that of flail silage (214 g/kg) and this
restricted fermentation and N solublisation. When fed to growing cattle, intake
(P<0.01), live-weight (LW) gain (P<0.001) and LW gain to feed ratio (P<0.05) were
greater for round-bale silage than for flail silage. In Experiment 2, flail-harvested silage
was compared with wilted, precision-chopped and round-bale silages conserved either
without or with pre-slicing immediately before baling. The DM concentration of flail,
precision-chopped and round-bale silages were 163, 334 and 468 g/kg, respectively.
Fermentation in flail silage was more extensive than in precision-chopped and particularly
round-bale silages, but insoluble-N concentration was unaffected. Round-bale
silage was more digestible (P<0.05) than flail or precision-chopped silages. Voluntary
intake was higher for steers fed round-bale silages compared to flail silage (P<0.05),
while intake of steers fed precision-chopped silage was intermediate (P>0.05). Steers
fed round-bale silages had higher LW gain (1.0 kg/day) than those fed flail (0.7 kg/day)
or precision-chopped silage (0.8 kg/day; P<0.05). Efficiency of utilization of DM for LW
gain was similar for all silages. Pre-slicing at baling had no effect on animal performance.
It is concluded that the increased performance by cattle offered silages made by
the wilted round-bale system was largely due to higher voluntary intake.
