Author:
KIRKPATRICK D. E.,STEEN R. W. J.
Abstract
An experiment was carried out in Northern Ireland in 1994 to examine
the effects of ensiling grass
on the partitioning of nutrients between lean and fat deposition in lambs
using the comparative
slaughter technique. The six treatments consisted of: (1) unsupplemented
grass silage; (2) grass silage
supplemented with concentrates, concentrates constituting 250 g/kg
total dry matter intake (DMI);
(3) grass silage supplemented with concentrates, concentrates constituting
500 g/kg total DMI; (4)
unsupplemented grass which had been conserved by freezing; (5) pre-frozen
grass supplemented with
concentrates, concentrates constituting 250 g/kg total DMI, and (6)
pre-frozen grass supplemented
with concentrates, concentrates constituting 500 g/kg total DMI. A
total of 84 Dutch Texel×Greyface
(Border Leicester×Blackface) lambs, consisting of 42 males which
were initially 35 (s.d. 4·8) kg
liveweight and 42 females which were 33 (S.D. 2·6) kg liveweight,
were used. The silage was well
preserved as indicated by its low pH (3·8), low concentration of
ammonia (60 g/kg total nitrogen) and
high concentration of lactic acid (129 g/kg DM). The grass had a higher
pH (5·2) and higher WSC
concentration (129 g/kg DM) and lower concentrations of lactic (33
g/kg DM) and acetic acids
(6 g/kg DM). Ensiling had no significant effect (P>0·05)
on empty body and carcass weight gains.
Animals offered unsupplemented silage had significantly lower protein (P<0·001)
concentration in
the carcass gain and significantly higher lipid and energy (P<0·001)
concentrations than animals
offered unsupplemented frozen grass. However, there was no effect of forage
type on chemical
composition of carcass gains when 50% forage was offered. It is concluded
that ensiling had no effect
on empty body or carcass weight gains, but did increase carcass fatness
when unsupplemented forages
were offered.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Genetics,Agronomy and Crop Science,Animal Science and Zoology
Cited by
6 articles.
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