Author:
PEIRIS H.,ELLIOTT R.,NORTON B. W.
Abstract
Sorghum grain was included in a basal diet of molasses
(molasses 505, urea 21, sunflower meal 191,
pangola grass hay 250, minerals 31 g/kg as fed) at rates
of 0, 202, 391 and 707 g/kg, generating diets
in which grain replaced 0 (diet A), 33 (diet B), 66 (diet C)
and 100% (diet D) of the molasses and hay.
The four diets were fed to groups of four Hereford steers
(293–334 kg liveweight) over a 96-day
period. One half of each treatment group was implanted with
a growth promotant (zeranol), and all
were slaughtered at a commercial abattoir at the end of the
trial. The inclusion of 33% grain
increased voluntary feed consumption, digestible dry matter
(DM) intake (from 57·6 to 82·0 g
digestible DM/kg0·75 per day and
significantly increased liveweight gain from 592 to 900 g/day.
Zeranol implantation also increased liveweight gain but not
feed intake. Steers given only grain (diet
D) had the highest liveweight gains (1127 g/day). The
addition of grain to molasses diets decreased
urinary N excretion and increased ammonia and volatile fatty
acid (VFA) concentrations in rumen
fluid. Molar proportions of propionic acid in total VFA
increased from 0·15 to 0·20, and butyric acid
decreased from 0·36 to 0·29 when 33% of the
molasses was replaced by sorghum grain. The fat
content (depth at sacral position) of the carcasses of steers
given grain only (diet D) was significantly
greater (14 mm) than that of steers given the basal diet of
molasses (4 mm), and carcass fat contents
were intermediate (10 and 11 mm) for steers given diets B
and C respectively. It was concluded that
the inclusion of small amounts of grain in molasses-based
diets increased cattle growth principally by
increasing digestible energy intake without decreasing
molasses intake, thus improving the efficiency
of utilization of molasses in molasses-based diets.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Genetics,Agronomy and Crop Science,Animal Science and Zoology
Cited by
5 articles.
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