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Journal of Dairy Science Vol. 36 No. 12 1326-1334
© 1953 by American Dairy Science Association ®
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A High Roughage System for Raising Dairy Calves Based on the Early Development of Rumen Function. III. Effect of Rumen Inoculations and the Ratio of Hay to Grain on Digestion and Nitrogen Retention

H. E. Conrad1 and J. W. Hibbs

Department of Dairy Science, Ohio Agricultural Experiment Station, Wooster

ABSTRACT

The digestibility of protein, dry matter, and cellulose and nitrogen retention have been studied in rumen inoculated and uninoculated calves and in calves fed various types of hay and grain in the ratios of 4:1, 3 :2, and 2 :3.

Cud inoculations increased the apparent digestibility of protein in a calf when a low protein, poor quality hay ration was fed or when the chief source of protein was alfalfa hay. Increased protein through heavier grain feeding did not result in a difference in protein digestibility between cud inoculated and uninoculated calves.

Nitrogen retention was not significantly affected by rumen inoculations.

Alfalfa and mixed clover-timothy hay fed in combination with a mixture of corn and soybean oil meal in the ratio of four parts hay to one part grain resulted in the low nitrogen retention of 7.45 g. per day per 100 lb. of body weight. When hay-grain ratios of 3:2 and 2:3 were fed, the average retention was 11.87 and 12.87 g. of nitrogen per 100 lb. of body weight per day, respectively. The average daily nitrogen retention for the two types of hay was approximately the same even though the apparent digestibility of alfalfa hay was markedly higher than that of the mixed clover-timothy.

The digestibility of cellulose was less when the 2:3 ratio of hay to grain was fed than when either 4:1 or 3:2 ratios were fed, regardless of the type of hay used. Calves changed abruptly from a 2:3 to a 4:1 ratio digested cellulose equally as well as control calves fed continuously on a 4:1 ratio.

The implications of these results are discussed in relation to rumen physiology and their application to the high roughage system of calf feeding.


FOOTNOTES

1 The material herein reported was taken from a dissertation presented by the senior author to the graduate faculty of The Ohio State University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy.







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Copyright © 1953 by the American Dairy Science Association ®.