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Effects of treating lucerne with an inoculum of lactic acid bacteria or formic acid upon chemical changes during fermentation, and upon the nutritive value of the silage for lambs
Author(s) -
PHILLIP L. E.,
UNDERHILL L.,
GARINO H.
Publication year - 1990
Publication title -
grass and forage science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.716
H-Index - 56
eISSN - 1365-2494
pISSN - 0142-5242
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-2494.1990.tb01958.x
Subject(s) - silage , formic acid , lactic acid , microbial inoculant , forage , fermentation , zoology , ammonia , dry matter , latin square , chemistry , biology , inoculation , food science , agronomy , bacteria , rumen , biochemistry , horticulture , genetics
A second cut of lucerne was wilted to 500 g DM kg −1 and either left untreated (control) or treated with formic acid (4.5 1 fresh forage t −1 ) or with a commercial inoculum of lactic acid bacteria (10 5 colony forming units (cfu) g forage −1 ). The forages were ensiled in 2‐t capacity silos for 8 months, and later fed to six lambs (mean initial weight 27.7 ±1.60 kg) in a 3x3 duplicated Latin square with 27‐d periods. Portions of the untreated and additive‐treated forages were also ensiled in laboratory silos at 25 ° C for intervals up to 42 d. Results from the laboratory silos showed that the major increase in ammonia‐N in silage occurred between 40 h and 7 d of fermentation; during this period, both formic acid and the inoculant produced a smaller increase in ammonia‐N, than did the control. The pH of inoculated silage declined from 5.74 to 4.57 in 7 d, but it took 14 d for the pH of the control silage to fall below 5.0. Formic acid treatment immediately reduced the silage pH from 5.74 to 5.10 ( P < 0·01); the pH then remained unchanged until 21 d, after which it decreased slightly. When compared with control, lambs fed formic acid‐treated silage consumed more ( P < 0·05) digestible organic matter; the response was associated with a trend towards decreased concentration of ammonia in plasma. Inoculation of lucerne silage did not ( P < 0·05) affect voluntary intake but increased ( P <0.05) apparent digestibility of fibre and tended to increase N retention.