Utilization of alkali-treated grain. 3. Utilization by steers of NaOH-treated and rolled barley in silage-based diets

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Abstract

In the first of three experiments, silage constituted 33 or 66% of the dry matter of complete diets, barley being the other component. The barley was either rolled, or treated with 30 g NaOH/kg dry matter. In two further treatments, the NaOH-treated barley was given in separate feeds, while silage was offered ad libitum. The diets were offered ad libitum to 32 Hereford cross steers from 325 kg live weight to slaughter at 450 kg live weight. Growth rate increased and feed conversion ratio decreased as the precentage of barley in the diet increased, but were significantly poorer with NaOH-treated than with rolled barley owing to the significantly lower digestibility of dry matter, organic matter and starch in diets containing NaOH-treated grain.

In the second experiment, the effect on digestibility of increasing the NaOH added to the barley used in the mixed diets was investigated with steers. The results showed that the level of NaOH application had to be greater when NaOH-treated barley was used in mixed feeds than when it was used as the sole feed. The optimum rate of application in silage based diets was in the region of 45 g NaOH/kg dry matter.

In the third experiment, forty Hereford cross steers were allocated to one of four treatments and were fattened from 325 to about 450 kg live weight. They were given (dry matter basis) 50% silage and 50% of barley, either rolled (RM) or treated with 45 g/kg NaOH (CM), mixed together, or they were given the silage alone until they had eaten the allocated quantity and then the allocated barley; the barley was either rolled (RS) or treated with 30 g/kg of NaOH (CS). The same quantities of silage and grain were given to all steers. The steers fed on silage and grain separately took, on average, 125 days to consume the feed (70 days for consumption of silage), but had similar carcass weights to the steers given mixed diets, which consumed their feed in 91 days. The growth rates for treatments RM, CM, RS and CS, respectively, were 1.15, 1.20, 0.89 and 0.78 kg/day, the food consumption was 737, 741, 728 and 741 kg dry matter and the final carcass weights were 256, 253, 247 and 252 kg. There were no significant differences between steers receiving the diets containing rolled or NaOH-treated barley.

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