Comparing Qualities of Grain Corn to Silage Corn

Similar documents
DESIGNED FOR MAKING MILK. dependable yields quality fiber digestible starch

2016 & 2017 Legend Seeds Silage Research Report

INTRODUCING LEAFY FLOURY HYBRIDS FOR IMPROVED SILAGE YIELD AND QUALITY. F. B. Glenn Glenn Seed Ltd. INTRODUCTION

Evaluating forage quality by visual appraisal, ph, and dry matter content

Bunker Silo and Drive- Over Silage Pile Management

Managing for Corn Silage Yield and Quality. Ev Thomas Miner Institute

ANSWERS TO SOME COMMON QUESTIONS ON SILAGE MANAGEMENT

CHAMPION TOC INDEX. How To Make Barley Silage. Arvid Aasen. Take Home Message. The Ensiling Process

Silage Yield Tons/A (70% Moisture) %CP %NDFd30. Silage Yield Tons/A (65% Moisture)

Opp p o p r o tun u i n t i ie i s t o o I m I p m r p ov o e v S arch h D ig i e g stib i i b l i i l t i y y on o n D air i y F rms

Corn Silage for Dairy Cows 1

Elk Mound Seed. Company Introduction

Successful Storage of By-Products

Dr. Dan Undersander University of Wisconsin

Making. High Quality SWEETPOTATO SILAGE. An Improved Tube Silage Making Method. transforming into

Silage Forage Quality Using Inoculants and Packing. Dr. Dan Undersander University of Wisconsin

HARVESTING MAXIMUM VALUE FROM SMALL GRAIN CEREAL FORAGES. George Fohner 1 ABSTRACT

Unit F: Harvesting Fruits and Nuts. Lesson 2: Grade, Pack, Store and Transport Fruits and Nuts

Effects of feeding brown midrib dwarf. performance and enteric methane. pearl millet silage on lactational. emission in dairy cows

Forage Systems to Increase Productivity

Focus. Forage. 1. Why grow maize for silage?

Three different kinds of silage may be recognized according to the temperature during fermentation:

Annual Grasses Preserved as Silage: Fermentation Characteristics, Nutritive Value, and Quality

CC110 Questions and Answers on Silage

Name. AGRONOMY 375 EXAM III May 4, points possible

Keys to Producing High Quality Corn Silage in Western Canada

Harvest and Storage of Silage. Ted Probert Regional Dairy Specialist

EFFECT OF HARVEST TIMING ON YIELD AND QUALITY OF SMALL GRAIN FORAGE. Carol Collar, Steve Wright, Peter Robinson and Dan Putnam 1 ABSTRACT

Faba Bean. Uses of Faba Bean

Gluten Index. Application & Method. Measure Gluten Quantity and Quality

Lecture 4. Factors affecting ripening can be physiological, physical, or biotic. Fruit maturity. Temperature.

2015 Dairy Foods CDE Exam 4-H and Jr Consumer Division

Interactions of forage quality and quantity, their implications in grazing and hay management

Disaster Recovery. Managing immature crops for grain or silage. Determining if it has reached maturity for a harvestable grain crop

Economic and Environmental Impacts Of Corn Silage Maturity Management

Baby corn is the young ear of female inflorescence of maize plant harvested before fertilization when the silk has just (1) Baby corn crop.

Factors Affecting the Quality Silage After Harvest. Fermentation. Aerobic stability. Aerobic Stability of Silages?

Spring Wheat Opportunities and Challenges for 2008

Instructor: Stephen L. Love Aberdeen R & E Center 1693 S 2700 W Aberdeen, ID Phone: Fax:

Silage is a forage crop that is preserved in succulent condition by a process of fermentation (i.e. under anaerobic conditions).

Effects of Ground Ear Corn vs. Ear Corn Silage on Rumen Fatty Acid Content

Corn Silage as a Companion Forage: Pros and Cons

HARVEST. Post Harvest Handling and Storage. Insta Poll (Discussion) How do you decide when to harvest? Post Harvest WHY? Harvest Methods.

Forage Planting Alternatives Mike Ballweg, Crops & Soils Agent, Sheboygan County

TROUBLESHOOTING GUIDE FLOUR TORTILLAS

Grain Craft. Thresher Seed Days Fort Hall, ID

Quality of western Canadian wheat exports 2008

Managing Forage for Single Digit Shrink Loss in Bunker Silos and Drive-over Piles

Recommended Resources: The following resources may be useful in teaching

Your web browser (Safari 7) is out of date. For more security, comfort and the best experience on this site: Update your browser Ignore

CALIFORNIA PREMIUM ALMONDS

Challenges for Growing Corn Silage Suitable for the Dairy Industry in a Northern Climate

Scope of Specialty corn for Income generation Introduction

2014 Organic Silage Corn Variety Trial for Coastal Humboldt County

Mexico Milk Cow Numbers and Milk Production per Cow,

Quality of western Canadian wheat exports 2010

Identifying and Fixing Tortilla Problems. Steve Bright VP R&D, Quality Mesa Foods

2016 Corn Silage Field Crop Trials Results

Check food quality. Types of feed and what to check for. Concentrates. Oats

Non-Structural Carbohydrates in Forage Cultivars Troy Downing Oregon State University

Some Hay Considerations

Silage Corn Variety Trial in Central Arizona

Sticking and mold control. TIA Tech 2017 Los Angeles, California Steve Bright

PROPOSED DRAFT STANDARD FOR AUBERGINES (At Step 5/8)

Hay Judging Scorecard

Harvesting Soybean. Soybean Loss. John Nowatzki Extension Agricultural Machine Systems Specialist

Beef. Multiple Choice. 1. About 75% of muscle tissue, or meat is (a) protein. (b) water. (c) fat. (d) collagen.

Quality of western Canadian wheat exports 2011

CONTENTS. Whisky recipes...7-8

Corn Quality for Alkaline Cooking: Analytical Challenges

Acreage Forecast

The delicate art of wine making. Alfa Laval Foodec decanter centrifuges in the wine industry

Prod t Diff erenti ti a on

WE SEE TEA DIFFERENTLY.

Quality of western Canadian flaxseed 2013

Sustainable Sweet Corn Production?

Supplementation Some protein, a lil energy, and minerals. Josh Davy MS, PAS, CRM UC Advisor Livestock and Range Tehama, Glenn, Colusa

Quality of Canadian non-food grade soybeans 2014

Working With Your Environment. Phenotype = Genotype x Environment

Abstract for Sugar Production. Ensymm abstract for Sugar Production

Servi-Tech Laboratories

4. The code of federal regulations stipulates that whole milk must contain 3.25% fat and % solids non-fat. a b c d. 10.

The proliferation of double-and

The Importance of Sorghum Grain Colour and Hardness, and Their Causes and Measurement

2016 Cool-Season Forage Variety Recommendations for Florida

March The newborn calf 3/14/2016. Risks and Benefits of Milk vs. Milk Replacers for. Low milk prices???? Incentive to lower SCC?

Food you can be proud of

Hobart FlashBake Oven Sandwich perfection at the speed of light.

MILLING TECHNOLOGY FOR CEREALS

EFFECT OF TOMATO GENETIC VARIATION ON LYE PEELING EFFICACY TOMATO SOLUTIONS JIM AND ADAM DICK SUMMARY

LEKARGA Keepfresh sheets

Feeding Prickly Pear Cactus (PCC) to Ruminants

COMPARISON OF CONCENTRATED SEPARATOR BY-PRODUCT TO MOLASSES AS AN ANIMAL FEED SOURCE

When quality comes first. Solutions for craft brewers

Viking Malt Barley News Crop 2017

SELF-POLLINATED HASS SEEDLINGS

Pointers, Indicators, and Measures of Tortilla Quality

Body Science: Healthy Habits (K 2 nd grades) Pre-Visit Activities

Features. Before first use

Management and Feeding of Holstein Steers

Transcription:

Comparing Qualities of Grain Corn to Silage Corn Having high quality forage as the basis of the TMR is critical to a dairy's profitability and realizing high income over feed costs. Breeding has a profound effect on the architecture and behavior of a corn hybrid. As a result of very different breeding goals, ideal grain and ideal silage hybrids have mostly OPPOSING characteristics. Leafy Corn Silage Hybrids have been bred for total plant silage characteristics. Dual purpose hybrids have been bred for total plant grain characteristics. What are these breeding goals and how do they transform the characteristics of these corn hybrids and the forage crop you harvest for feed? Breeding for Grain Approximately 92% of corn acres are grown for grain. In order for a grain hybrid to perform, it must have durable kernels that will stay intact during combining, shipping and elevating. These kernels must also dry quickly to save on the cost of mechanical drying. To ensure the successful harvest of a grain crop, breeders select grain hybrids to have stiff stalks that will stand late into the season. These hybrids are also designed to have a relatively high ear placement on the plant for ease of combining. Grain farmers are paid on the basis of kernel integrity, test weight and kernel moisture. To meet this bill, a successful grain hybrid must have three key kernel characteristics: They must have a vitreous, or glass-like kernel type, which makes them hard, tough and heavy. These kernels must be relatively small to further reduce the likelihood that they will fracture during mechanical processing, and they must dry rapidly on the plant as it reaches maturity to save on drying costs. Grain-type hybrids, with their small, fast drying, vitreous kernels, are ideal for delivering high quantities of starch in compact transportable packages to distant markets. Dual purpose hybrids are bred for grain and do not make ideal silage. Here's two key reasons explaining why: 1. The Starch: As a grain hybrid reaches silage maturity, its kernels dry rapidly and get very hard. This rapid drying creates a very narrow silage harvest window, which is further complicated by the extended stay green of the grain hybrid's stalk. Often, when the kernels reach a silage appropriate moisture, the plants are far too green and wet to put in the bunker. If the plant is harvested once the plant reaches silage-appropriate moisture levels, the kernels have likely become hard and dry.

While the kernels may have a high starch test weight, they remain whole or fracture into large pieces during silage harvest and cow chewing. In this form, much of the starch is unavailable in the rumen for milk production. In order to soften these large hard chunks of starch, a minimum storage period of six months is recommended. This long storage period increases storage space requirements and dry matter losses, and does not guarantee ideal starch quality by the time it is fed. Starch can be made more digestible by processing, but this damages effective fiber and does not consistently reduce starch to a particle size that is comparable with a hybrid that has a more digestible kernel type. 2. The Fiber: A successful grain hybrid is bred to withstand the elements until late season harvest, which requires the stalk to be stiff and solid. In addition, its ear must be positioned high on the plant to ensure successful harvest by the combine. Both of these requirements reduce fiber digestibility. The ear is the heaviest part of the plant, so the below ear portion of the stalk must be heavily lignified in order to support it. By raising the ear position and selecting for stiff stalks, grain hybrids produce a high proportion of indigestible fiber. It can be difficult to harvest a grain hybrid for silage when its stalk is at the appropriate moisture level. It can pass from too wet to too dry rapidly and this reduces silage quality and feed efficiency. Excessively wet or dry silages often result in inadequate fermentation and unstable silage products. Breeding for Silage Roughly 8% of corn acres are grown for corn silage. In this application, ideal harvest occurs when the crop has reached 65% moisture and 50% kernel milk line. During this harvest window, the whole plant is cut low to the ground and is chopped into small pieces before being compacted into a silo or bunker, ensiled, mixed into a TMR and fed to dairy cows for a season or more. Given this process, an ideal silage hybrid must satisfy an entirely different set of parameters than a grain hybrid. It must have a high total plant yield of digestible starch and fiber, a long harvest window in which the plant dries to the appropriate moisture and remains there for an extended period, adequate sugars to promote fermentation, and a relatively short storage period to save on space and reduce dry matter losses. Ultimately, a corn silage hybrid must produce a robust, reliable, digestible crop that will promote rumination and readily produce high quality milk when mixed into a TMR and fed to a lactating cow. Dan Matzek Legend Sales Agronomist Ellsworth, Wisconsin

Appendix A: Plant type comparisons & ear type comparisons Breeding for ideal grain versus ideal silage characteristics results in distinct plant types that share little in common: A silage-specific ear and a dual-purpose grain corn ear that have been shaved to reveal kernel composition. The silage-specific ear contains much more floury starch:

Appendix B: Characteristic comparisons of grain and silage