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Feeding Dried Distillers Grains to Hogs

Learn how to effectively incorporate dried distillers grains with solubles (DDGS) into swine diets, considering the nutritional benefits and potential issues, along with practical handling and feeding guidelines.

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Feeding Dried Distillers Grains to Hogs

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  1. Feeding Dried Distillers Grains to Hogs Ron Plain, University of Missouri

  2. Production of Ethanol and Dried Distiller Grains with Solubles • 1 bushel of corn (56 lbs) will yield: • 2.75 gallons of ethanol • 17 lbs of DDGS A 45 mil gal/yr plant generates: ~ 400 tons of DDGS every day

  3. Dry Milled Ethanol Production Corn Ethanol Stillage Thin Stillage Wet Distiller Grain Condensed Distiller Solubles Wet Distiller Grain with Solubles DDGS

  4. Wet Milled & Dry Milled Corn for Ethanol Forecast Source: PRX Blue Sky

  5. DDGS Production in the U.S. • 2000 – 4.3 billion pounds • 2006 – 25.5 billion pounds • 2010 – 42.5 billion pounds By comparison, U.S. hogs eat about 82 billion pounds of feed annually

  6. Use of Dried Distiller Grains with Solubles • 80% used in ruminant diets • 10% exported • 10% fed to non-ruminants

  7. U.S. Ethanol Plants 5 bgy expanding to 8 bgy

  8. Nutrient Composition (DM)

  9. Dried Distiller Grains with Solubles • Product variability – Nutrient Content • Crude protein • 23 to 30 % • Amino acid digestibility • 17.7 to 74.4 % • Lysine content • 0.59 to 0.89 % • Crude fat • 3 to 12 %

  10. Why the variation in nutrient concentrations? • Nutrient variability of the corn • Processing methods • Type of yeast used • Fermenting and distillation efficiency • Drying temperature and time • Amount of solubles blended

  11. DDGS Product Variability • Variability impacts on: • Nutritional value • Palatability (feed intake) • Indicators of quality • Color • Light golden to dark brown • Smell • Sweet to smoky or burnt

  12. Dried Distiller Grains with Solubles Lower Quality Less Digestible High Quality Highly Digestible

  13. DDGS Nutritional Issues • Micotoxins: • Any micotoxins (aflatoxin, vomatoxin, etc) in corn are concentrated by dry milling • Only purchase DDGS from ethanol plants which check corn for micotoxins before milling

  14. DDGS Nutritional Issues • Amino Acids: • Imbalance of amino acids (lysine, cystine and threonine) • Reduced amino acid digestibility • Add synthetic lysine if DDGS >10% of diet • Add synthetic threonine and tryptophan if DDGS >20% of diet

  15. DDGS Nutritional Issues • Minerals • Corn is 0.25% phosphorus which is 14% digestible by hogs • DDGS is 0.75% phosphorus which is 90% digestible • Add less dicalcium phosphate to hog diets containing DDGS • Less phosphorus in the manure

  16. DDGS Nutritional Issues • High Fat Content (9-12%) • Negatively impacts pork fat • quality and belly firmness • Significant problem if DDGS>20% of diet

  17. DDGS Impact on Pork Fat DDGS Content of Feed

  18. DDGS Nutritional Issues • High Fiber Content • Valuable for ruminants • Low digestibility for hogs • Adds to volume of manure

  19. DDGS Handling • Particle size • 600 to 2,100 microns • Impacts • Flowability • Pelletability

  20. Storing DDGS • Limited Storage • High in polyunsaturated fatty acids • Wet distillers • Summer – 7 days • Winter – 3 to 4 weeks • Dry distillers (> 85 % DM) • Summer – 1 month • Winter – 3 months

  21. Dried Distiller Grains with Solubles • Health Considerations • Low soluble fiber diets may reduce the proliferation of pathogenic organisms in the GI tract (Hampson, 1999) • Illeitis or Lawsonia intracellularis • Hemorrhagic bowel syndrome • Fewer cases of: • Acidosis • Laminitis • Liver abscesses

  22. Feeding DDGS to Sows • DDGS during gestation & lactation • Slightly improves next pregnancy’s • Feed intake • Litter size • Weaning weight

  23. Substitution Rule for Swine Rations • Add 200 lb of DDGS + 3 lb limestone • To replace: • 177 lbs of corn • 20 lbs soybean meal (44%) • 6 lbs of dicalcium phosphate

  24. Hog Growth Performance (63-268 pounds) Some other trials show no negative impact on animal performance for low levels of DDGS in diet Source: University of Missouri feeding trials

  25. Economic Value of DDGS for Hogs (0% reduction in ADG) DDGS values ($/ton) for various prices of corn and soybean meal Soybean Meal Price ($/ton)

  26. Economic Value of DDGS for Hogs (2% reduction in ADG) DDGS values ($/ton) for various prices of corn and soybean meal Soybean Meal Price ($/ton)

  27. Economic Value of DDGS for Hogs (4% reduction in ADG) DDGS values ($/ton) for various prices of corn and soybean meal Soybean Meal Price ($/ton)

  28. Recommended Inclusion Rates for DDGS in Swine Diets PhaseStart pointMax Nursery (> 15 lbs) 5% 25% Grow-finish 10% 20% Gestating sows 20% 50% Lactating sows 5% 20% Boars 20% 50%

  29. Limitations • Synthetic amino acids needed if DDGS >10% of ration • Quality of pork fat impaired if DDGS >20% of ration • Not recommended for pigs <15 lbs • Sows may need adaptation period to high levels of DDGS

  30. Summary • DDGS can effectively be used in swine diets • DDGS can negatively impact feed intake • DDGS quality is highly variable • Producers should test samples or develop specification sheet with the plant to properly formulate the ration • 200 lbs DDGS plus 3 lbs of limestone replaces 177 lbs corn, 20 lbs SBM and 6 lbs dical

  31. Questions?

  32. Acknowledgements This PowerPoint file was adapted by: • Ron Plain, Ag Economist, U of Missouri • From a PowerPoint file originally developed by Marcia Shannon, Animal Scientist, U of Missouri • Summarizing a lot of fine research, especially by Jerry Shurson, Animal Scientist, U of Minnesota A useful website: www.ddgs.umn.edu

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