30 round bales of 2nd cut Italian ryegrass, harvested at 3 levels of prewilting - 22%, 28% and 33% DM content - were sealed in polythene bags. A sample of the herbage used to prepare each bale was chopped and packed into a laboratory silo maintained at 22°C for the same pe¬riod as the bales (120 days), as a check of ordinary fermentation conditions. The herbage was shown to have a WSC content rainging from 8.1% to 12.1% of DM, a WSC:TN ratio varying between 5.0 and 7.5, unfavou-rable for satisfactory fermentation process, and a high SiO2 content (3% of DM) due to soil contamination. Laboratory silages proved to have similar characteristics as the bale silages. In the latter, the SN, NH3-N, acetic acid and meq VFA content ranged within acceptable values. Even though the bu¬tyric acid concen-tration decreased from 27.8? to 12.7? with the increasing of bale DM, these levels were high enough to indicate lowered silage quality. This effect was related to the soil con¬tamination that increased the growth of butyric clostridia, which were insufficiently inhibited by the lactic acidification. Over the 7 days period of silage sample exposure to air, DM los¬ses did not exceed 1%. As the DM increased and the butyric acid decreased, the "in vitro" DOMD (Tilley and Terry) increased from 55.8% through 62.5% to 69.9% and the voluntary intake in cattle increased from 8.61% through 8.63% to 9.14% of LW0.75. In conclusion, it should be emphasised that great care is neces¬sary during field treatments for forage wilting and harvesting because soil contamination lowers the value of silage by affecting conservation quality.
Un esperimento di insilamento del loglio italico (Lolium multiflorum Lam.) inquinato di terra
PEIRETTI PG;DELMASTRO R
1987
Abstract
30 round bales of 2nd cut Italian ryegrass, harvested at 3 levels of prewilting - 22%, 28% and 33% DM content - were sealed in polythene bags. A sample of the herbage used to prepare each bale was chopped and packed into a laboratory silo maintained at 22°C for the same pe¬riod as the bales (120 days), as a check of ordinary fermentation conditions. The herbage was shown to have a WSC content rainging from 8.1% to 12.1% of DM, a WSC:TN ratio varying between 5.0 and 7.5, unfavou-rable for satisfactory fermentation process, and a high SiO2 content (3% of DM) due to soil contamination. Laboratory silages proved to have similar characteristics as the bale silages. In the latter, the SN, NH3-N, acetic acid and meq VFA content ranged within acceptable values. Even though the bu¬tyric acid concen-tration decreased from 27.8? to 12.7? with the increasing of bale DM, these levels were high enough to indicate lowered silage quality. This effect was related to the soil con¬tamination that increased the growth of butyric clostridia, which were insufficiently inhibited by the lactic acidification. Over the 7 days period of silage sample exposure to air, DM los¬ses did not exceed 1%. As the DM increased and the butyric acid decreased, the "in vitro" DOMD (Tilley and Terry) increased from 55.8% through 62.5% to 69.9% and the voluntary intake in cattle increased from 8.61% through 8.63% to 9.14% of LW0.75. In conclusion, it should be emphasised that great care is neces¬sary during field treatments for forage wilting and harvesting because soil contamination lowers the value of silage by affecting conservation quality.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.