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Silage fermentation characteristics of grass species grown under two nitrogen fertilizer inputs and harvested at advancing maturity in the spring growth
Author(s) -
King Colman,
McEniry Joseph,
Richardson Mark,
O'Kiely Padraig
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
grassland science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.388
H-Index - 19
eISSN - 1744-697X
pISSN - 1744-6961
DOI - 10.1111/grs.12011
Subject(s) - dactylis glomerata , festuca arundinacea , lolium perenne , agronomy , silage , dry matter , fertilizer , lolium multiflorum , perennial plant , biology , phleum , forage , lolium , chemistry , poaceae
Three of the main management factors affecting herbage chemical composition pre‐ensiling are plant species, rate of nitrogen ( N ) fertilizer application and stage of maturity at harvest. This study investigated the effects of N fertilizer input and harvest date in the spring growth on the fermentation characteristics, dry matter recovery and aerobic stability of silages prepared from five common grass species. Perennial ryegrass ( Lolium perenne cv. Gandalf), Italian ryegrass ( Lolium multiflorum cv. Prospect), tall fescue ( Festuca arundinacea cv. Fuego), cocksfoot (orchardgrass, Dactylis glomerata cv. Pizza) and timothy ( Phleum pratense cv. Erecta) were grown under two inorganic N fertilizer inputs (0 and 125 kg N ha −1 ), harvested at five dates in the spring growth (fortnightly from 12 M ay to 7 J uly; Harvests 1 to 5, respectively) and subsequently ensiled in laboratory pipe silos for a period of 100 days. The ryegrass and tall fescue silages exhibited a lactic acid dominant fermentation and showed little evidence of secondary clostridial activity. In contrast, the challenge to preservation proved greater for the timothy (Harvests 1 and 2) and cocksfoot (Harvests 1 and 5) herbages, with the high pH (>4.2) and high butyric acid (>10 g kg −1 dry matter) and ammonia‐ N (>100 g kg −1 N) concentrations being indicative of secondary clostridial activity during storage. Despite the effects on herbage chemical composition prior to ensiling being indicative of a greater challenge to preservation, there was little effect of fertilizer N on the extent or direction of fermentation. Although the Italian ryegrass herbage avoided significant clostridial activity, this herbage incurred the greatest dry matter losses during ensiling. This was particularly evident at early harvest dates suggesting yeast fermentation of sugars, which were surplus to the requirement for a lactic acid dominant fermentation.