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Feeding Corn Co-products in Dairy Herds

Feeding Corn Co-products in Dairy Herds. David Anderson, Texas A&M University C. Wilson Gray, University of Idaho. Overview. Overview of DDGs Characteristics Types of corn co-products Challenges in Feeding corn co-products Economics of corn co-products Summary. For Starters….

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Feeding Corn Co-products in Dairy Herds

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  1. Feeding Corn Co-productsin Dairy Herds David Anderson, Texas A&M University C. Wilson Gray, University of Idaho

  2. Overview • Overview of DDGs Characteristics • Types of corn co-products • Challenges in Feeding corn co-products • Economics of corn co-products • Summary

  3. For Starters… • This Isn’t New • Brewers and Distillers Grain have been fed forever • Can’t Just Feed it Alone • There aren’t many feeds you can feed exclusively • If Price is Right and We’ll Feed A Lot

  4. Location, Location, Location… • Where’s the Feed? • Where are the Livestock?

  5. Distiller’s Grain Basics

  6. Key points on ethanol co-products • What types of products are available? • How much product can be used in the ration? • How different are the nutritional properties of specific co-products (low oil, low protein, modified moisture, mixtures)? • Which feed ration combinations work best? • Can the variation in some nutrients be reduced? Source: Dan Loy, ISU

  7. Types of DDG Processing • Wet Mill • Accounts for largest share & costly • Multiple Products: • high fructose sweetener, corn oil, ethanol • corn gluten meal, corn gluten feed and other types • Dry Grind • Generally smaller and less costly • Two Products: • Ethanol • Distillers Grain and Solubles

  8. Wet Milling - Corn Gluten Feed STEEP CORN GRIND WASH WATER SEPARATION STARCH, SWEETNER, ALCOHOL GLUTEN MEAL CORN OIL STEEP CORN BRAN SEM, screenings, dist solubles WET CORN GLUTEN FEED DRY CORN GLUTEN FEED

  9. Products of Wet Corn Milling • One bushel of corn produces: ProductPounds • Starch 31.5 Further processed into 33# of sweetener or 2.5 gallons of ethanol • Gluten feed 13.5 • Gluten meal 2.5 • Corn meal 1.6

  10. Corn Gluten Feed (CGF) • Corn bran + steep • Can be wet or dry • Moderate crude protein, CP = 16-23% • 80% of CP is DIP (ruminally degradable) • Low fat, moderate fiber, TDN = 80 • 101-115% of energy value of dry-rolled corn • Product variation is significant within and across plants due to amount of steep added back to the corn bran • Oatmeal-type appearance

  11. Dry Milling - Distillers Grains+Solubles CORN GRIND, WET, COOK FERMENTATION YEAST, ENZYMES STILL ALCOHOL & CO2 STILLAGE DISTILLERS GRAINS WDG, DDG DISTILLERS SOLUBLES WDGS DDGS

  12. Products of Dry Corn Milling • One bushel of corn produces: • Ethanol 2.7 gallons • Distillers grains & solubles 17-18 pounds • DGS are one third the weight of the corn and all but the starch is concentrated into this one-third • Sulfur is concentrated and may have been used in the fermenting process • Mycotoxins, if they existed in the corn are also concentrated 3:1

  13. Distillers Grains + Solubles • Distillers Grains (65%) & Solubles (35%) (DM basis) • May be wet or dried • Higher crude protein, CP = 30% • 65% UIP (undegraded, “bypass”, protein) • High fat (11%), TDN = 70-110 • Concentrates nutrients 3-fold from corn • 0.8% P, 0.35-1.0% Sulfur (variable) • Mashed potatoes-type appearance

  14. Nutrient Composition of Selected Corn Milling Co-Products

  15. Starch Removal Concentrates - Other Nutrients Source: Dan Loy, ISU

  16. Ruminant Energy Value of DDGS

  17. Protein in Distiller’s Grains • 30% of DM and more than old “book values” • Similar for DDG & DDGS • Good source of Ruminally Undegradable Protein (approximately 55% RUP) • RUP is slightly less for wet vs. dry DDG • Protein quality • Fairly good quality • Lysine is first limiting amino acid

  18. How Much Can be Fed to Dairy Cows? • Max. of ~ 20% of ration DM - 10-13 lb/d of dried - 30-40 lb/d of wet • Usually no palatability problem at 30% of DM: • May decrease DMI, especially if Wet CDG • May feed excess protein • At > 30% of DM • May negatively impact butterfat and protein in milk • Calves • Up to 20% DMI • Replacement Heifers • Up to 25% DMI Source: Shurson, U of MN

  19. Challenges

  20. Challenges of DDGS • Storage and handling is more costly • High levels of feeding management is required • Bunk management and mixing • Nutrient balances • Nutrient (manure) management is more costly • Some nutrients are concentrated (e.g., P) Source: Dan Loy, ISU

  21. Challenges of DDGS • Must be golden brown • Dark brown is over heated and ties up lysine • Flowability • Pellet quality • Requires another bin for storage • Abrupt changes may put cows off-feed

  22. Challenges of DDGS • Wet vs. Dry Distiller’s Grains for Dairy Cows • Nutrient content of DM is the same • Wet Distiller’s Grains Considerations • Usual storage period is 5-7 days • May require preservatives (e.g. propionic acid) • Limited hauling distance • May make rations too wet • Limits total DM intake especially when silages are used

  23. Storing Wet DGS • Storing Wet DGS product: • Often delivered in truck load lots • Can store wet DGS in bunker, silage bag or in pile covered with plastic to protect from air • Should mix with tub-ground forage and sotred in bunker or bag • Need to have the “mix: right….

  24. Economics: A Little Supply and Demand

  25. U.S. Distillers Grain Production

  26. Potential DDG Usage Note: Use b/lbs is usage in billion pounds

  27. Distillers Grain Production & Use Potential Use Realistic Use

  28. Ratio of Corn to DDGS PricesRatio of Dollars per Pound, Central Illinois DDGS and Texas Triangle Corn

  29. Economic impact of including DGS Source: Garcia & Taylor, SDSU

  30. Interactions – Economic Realities • Higher Feed Costs • Byproducts offer some price mitigation • Markets Respond Through Price • Feeder cattle and calf prices • Reduced Production • Lower milk production per cow, producers exit industry • Livestock Industry Less Competitive • World market, regionally in U.S. • Higher Food Costs for Consumers • Transitional Period is Critical • Supply response, energy, technology, food and feed markets

  31. Summary • Use in Moderation • There are limits • DDGS can be superior to corn • WDGS are better than DDGS • Challenges are manageable • Distiller’s grains are not as cheap as once was • Price moves directly with corn prices • Use can reduce ration costs

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