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J. Dairy Sci. 86:3271-3299
© American Dairy Science Association, 2003.

Corn Silage Management: Effects of Hybrid, Maturity, Chop Length, and Mechanical Processing on Rate and Extent of Digestion

L. M. Johnson*, J. H. Harrison*, D. Davidson*, C. Hunt{dagger}, W. C. Mahanna{ddagger} and K. Shinners§

* Department of Animal Sciences,Washington State University, Puyallup 98371
{dagger} Department of Animal and Veterinary Sciences, University of Idaho, Moscow 83844
{ddagger} Pioneer Hi-Bred International, Des Moines, IA 50131
§ Department of Biological System Engineering, University of Wisconsin, Madison 53706

Corresponding author: J. Harrison; e-mail: harrison{at}puyallup.wsu.edu.

Five experiments were conducted to evaluate the effects of hybrid, chop length, maturity, and mechanical processing of corn silage on dry matter and nutrient disappearance in the rumen. Corn silage that had not been dried or ground was incubated in macro in situ bags (30 x 35 cm) for 8, 16, 24, 48, and 96 h. Experiments 1a and 2 evaluated the effects of maturity and mechanical processing for two corn silage hybrids harvested at two theoretical lengths-of-cut. Experiments 3 through 5 evaluated the effects of chop length and mechanical processing for two corn silage hybrids harvested at two-thirds milkline. The hybrid with low neutral fiber (NDF) concentrations had greater dry matter and starch disappearance than the hybrid with high NDF concentrations. The effect of chop length on nutrient disappearance was variable across experiments 3 through 5. Processing improved dry matter disappearance in experiments 1a, 2 (two-thirds milkline and blackline), 3, 4, and 5 at the majority of ruminal incubation timepoints. Starch disappearance was greater for unprocessed corn silage in experiment 1a (hard dough and two-thirds milkline) and was greater for processed corn silage in experiments 2 and 5. However, there was no consistent trend in starch disappearance between processed and unprocessed corn silage in experiments 3 and 4. This can be partially explained by the high disappearance of starch (experiment 3, >=98% and experiment 4, >=94%) by 24 h of ruminal incubation. Minimal differences were detected in NDF disappearance between processed and unprocessed corn silage across maturities. In experiments 2 and 5, crude protein disappearance was improved due to processing at some incubation timepoints. Rate of dry matter, starch (one-third milkline and two-thirds milkline), and NDF disappearance tended to increase when corn silage was mechanically processed in experiment 2. Dry matter, starch, and crude protein disappearance tended to be greater for corn silage harvested at the early maturity (one-third milkline) in experiment 2 compared with advanced maturities (two-thirds milkline and blackline). Disappearance of NDF was greater at early maturities compared with advanced maturities in experiments 1a and 2. Rate of dry matter (hybrid 3845), starch, and NDF (hybrid 3845) disappearance tended to decrease as maturity advanced from one-third milkline to blackline in experiment 2. These results suggest that the macro in situ method can be used to evaluate nutrient disappearance in the rumen.

Key Words: chop length • corn silage hybrid • mechanical processing • macro in situ

Abbreviation key: ADICP = acid detergent insoluble CP, BL = blackline, GDU = growing degree day units, ML = milkline, NDICP = neutral detergent insoluble CP, TLC = theoretical length-of-cut




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