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1. Nutrition for the Cow Herd Grazing Season
Winter Feeding – large portion of the annual nutrient cost
Strategy:
Maximize length of the grazing season
Try to be economical during winter feeding
2. Principles of Cow Nutrition – Emphasis on Winter Feeding Proper nutrition of the wintering cow is a necessary evil – important to the cow but expensive
Spring calving cows are in late gestation and early lactation – most critical times of the annual cycle
3. Principles of Cow Nutrition – Emphasis on Winter Feeding Nothing you will do will impact current and subsequent calf crops more than proper winter nutrition
Can not afford to obtain maximal (100% calf crop; need to find the optimal (90-92%)
4. If winter feeding for 100 days of gestation and 70 days post partum: 100 days * $.92/day = $92
70 days * $1.14/day = $79.80
Total = $171.80 – these costs do not include labor or feeding equipment 510 lb WW, 88% calf crop = 449 lb wean/cow
449 lb x $1.15 (avg for steers and heifers) = $516
Winter feed cost are 35-40% of your gross revenue!
5. Nutrients all animals require: *** Energy
*** Protein
Minerals
Vitamins
Water
No nutrient is more important than another, but energy and protein are:
Most costly to provide
Most likely to affect production
6. Minerals Macro-minerals:
Ca, P, Mg, K, Na, Cl, S
Micro-minerals (trace minerals):
Cu, Se, Zn, Mn, Fe, I, Fl, Co, Cr, Mo, S
Forms:
Oxides
Sulfates and carbonates
Proteinated:
Zn, Cu, Mn, Fe, Se
7. Minerals – Calcium and PhosphorusMajor components of milk Forages are good source of Ca, especially legumes (alfalfa)
Ca is inexpensive to supplement: ground limestone, must be pulverized
Forages maybe deficient, some supplementation may be necessary in the winter
Mineral supplements with 5% P will be adequate
P sources are expensive and will make the mineral supplement more expensive than it often needs to be
Environmental concern??
8. Minerals – MagnesiumLook out for Grass Tetany Grass tetany is a Mg deficiency usual observed in the spring – early turn-out
Usually some death loss
Cool soils, rapidly growing cool-season grasses results in low uptake of Mg and diluted Mg in vegetation
Often is a result of high K in forages as much as low Mg – causes an imbalance and poor metabolism of Mg
desire K:(Mg + Ca) < 2.3 in grazed forage
Keep Mg oxide in your mineral supplement – I like it year-round!
10. Minerals – CopperLots of Cu deficiency in the West Geological Cu deficiency – leads to deficiency in the grazed forage
More often there is a Mo abundance – antagonist to Cu
Want a Cu:Mo ratio in vegetation greater than 7
Also, S (sulfates) are Cu antagonists!
Deficiency hard to diagnose, may be just poor growth, rough hair coat, etc
Blood test is not a good indicator – need liver sample!
May justify expense of proteinated Cu
11. Minerals – SeleniumLots of Se deficiency in the West Geological Se deficiency – leads to deficiency in the grazed forage
FDA regulates the level allowed in supplement to .3 ppm in the diet –historical evidence that Se is carcinogen but the reality is it is not a cancer risk
Deficiency symptoms are common
White muscle disease
Weak calves, fail to thrive and die
Slough hooves (also symptom of excess SE)
Retained placneta
Recommend dietary Se
Boluses and injectables (Bo-Se) are okay but don’t solve the problem
May justify expense of proteinated Se – recently FDA approved seleno-methionine
12. Vitamins Not B vitamins, C and K – why not? Vitamin A
Abundant in green forage
Liver (adipose tissue) storage for 90 days
Watch out after months of feeding low quality forage in the winter
Restore vitamin A 30 days pre-partem Vitamin E
Also in green forage
Very labile – easily destroyed, not present in:
Year-old hay
Silages
Spoiled feeds
Body stores don’t last as long
May improve immunity of the newborn calf
Especially important if in Se-deficient area
17. What about using fats to meet the dietary requirement of the cow? Fiber (forage) and starch (grain) are more typical substrates for energy for the beef cow
Fats usually have higher $/Mcal!
But, fats, especially PUFAs, may have metabolic and/or ovarian benefits for the PP cow
Fish oils
Vegetable oils (cottonseed, canola)
Watch out for negative effects on the rumen
18. Protein
19. Protein is Required by Cows to: 1. Enhance feed intake & use of energy
2. Supply nitrogen to microbes
- Ammonia
- Amino acids
- Peptides
3. Supply amino acids for synthesis of:
- Milk protein
- Tissue protein
- Enzymes, hormones, etc.
4. Supply carbons for glucose synthesis
20. Crude protein (CP)
(TP) + (NPN)
true protein + non-protein nitrogen
Feed protein
16% N
6.25 * N = CP of feed
urea is 287% CP
45.92% N * 6.25
24. How much of an cow’s CP requirement can be provided by urea?? $64,000 question!! Very depend on energy of the cow’s winter ration
Most urea provided in pelleted, dry supplement or a liquid supplement:
How much energy is in the basal ingredients?
How much energy is in the supplements?
Grain and grain by-products in the dry supplements, molasses in the liquid supplements
Hunt says urea can be:
1/3 of cow’s protein reqmt, or
½ of protein in the supplement
26. “Project $1.5 M” Approximately 500,000 beef cows in Idaho
What if I could help reduce the winter feeding cost on 1/3 of these cows
150,000 cows x $10 = $1.5 M!!
Help producers change the way they think
Instead of thinking lbs of hay fed/day, think of lbs of protein and calories of energy
Instead of thinking $/ton of feed, think $/protein and $/calorie of energy
27. My strategies for keeping winter feed costs low have been:
Wintering Alternative I: More energy and protein from concentrates, less from forage
Wintering Alternative II: Ammoniation of Low Quality Forage
What to do? Go back to the basics – look for feeds with lowest cost of energy ($/Mcal) and protein ($/lb of protein)
28. Wintering Alternative I: More nutrients from concentrates, less from forage Energy from concentrates has been cheaper than forage:
Feeder alfalfa or grass hay @ $120/ton, .78 Mcal/lb = $.077/Mcal
Corn @ $200/ton, 1.35 Mcal/lb = $.074/mcal Two methods to economize:
Restrict/limit feed hay
Fill up on low-quality roughage – straw
If possible, let the cow do the harvesting!
29. Wintering Alternative II: Ammoniation of Low Quality Forage Swells “cracks” fiber to provide better ruminal microbial attack
Provides a source of nitrogen for microbes to convert to protein
Agents for ammoniation:
*** Anhydrous ammonia
Aqueous ammonia
Urea
30. Nutritive value of bluegrass straw needs to be enhanced to support a productive beef cow
32. Daily feed cost for 1000 lb, late gestation cow Untreated bluegrass straw
Straw ($75/ton) = 15.4 lb
Barley ($200/ton) = 7.5 lb
Alfalfa hay ($120/ton) = 5.1 lb
$/day = $1.63 Ammoniated bluegrass straw
Straw ($100/ton = 18.9 lb
Barley ($200) = 2.6 lb
$/day = $1.21, or
Instead of $25, could afford $70/ton) treatment cost
33. Factors affect ammoniation response:Can we reduce the amount of ammonia need or increase the digestibility response? Bale with some moisture - 18% moisture such as dew moisture or after a light rain
Ammoniate in early fall when ambient temperatures of still warm
34. Wintering Alternative III: By-product feeding Food or industrial by-product – utilize ruminal digestive system
Moisture content may limits distance to transport – often regional resources
Grain byproducts: distillers grains (!), wheat millrun, grain dust, screenings, etc
Cull peas or screenings!!
Grass seed byproduct
Food by-products: potato, apple pomace, onions, carrots, beet pulp (wet or dry)
Many, many others depending on the region