Yr. Agbossamey et al., Effect of intensity of maceration on digestibility and intake of alfalfa hay and silage fed to sheep, CAN J ANIM, 80(1), 2000, pp. 113-121
A study was conducted to determine the influence of intensity of mechanical
conditioning on the nutritive value of alfalfa conserved as hay or silage.
Fresh alfalfa was mowed and conditioned at three levels of maceration prio
r to field wilting during 45 h for silage (29-39% DM) or 94 h for hay (87%
DM, after barn-curing), under light rain conditions during the first 2 d. T
he conditioning treatments were: control (conventional mowing-conditioning)
, light maceration (one passage through three knurled steer rolls), medium
maceration (two passages), and intense maceration (three passages). Concent
rations of NDF, ADF, hemicellulose, CP-NDF, and CP-ADF increased linearly (
P < 0.001) with the level of maceration. Silage pH, acetic acid, propionic
acid, and butyric acid increased, while lactic acid decreased (P < 0.001),
with the level of maceration. The effective rumen degradabilities of DM, CP
, and NDF, measured with fistulated cows, were not affected (P > 0.10) by t
he level of mechanical conditioning. Forty-eight male sheep (46.8 +/- 6.7 k
g BW) were fed a 100% forage diet according to a completely randomized desi
gn with a 2 x 4 factorial arrangement of treatments (two storage methods an
d four levels of conditioning). Under restricted feeding, DM, NDF, ADF, and
hemicellulose digestibilities decreased linearly (P < 0.001) with the leve
l of maceration. However, the digestibility of CP-NDF increased with the le
vel of maceration; the effect was more important in hay than in silage (P <
0.001 for the interaction). When silages were fed ad libitum to 24 sheep,
daily DMI was 2.31, 2.88, 2.76, and 2.41% of BW and DM digestibility was 60
.8, 60.1, 56.2, and 46.7%, for control, light, medium, and intense macerati
on, respectively (P < 0.01). The results suggest that light maceration incr
eases DM intake while maintaining digestibility of forages fed to sheep. Be
cause of humid conditions and potential soil contamination due to multiple
windrow pickup, intense maceration caused severe nutrient loss, which might
be avoided under dry field wilting and good storage conditions.