Literature DB >> 23478824

Ammonia emissions and performance of backgrounding and finishing beef feedlot cattle fed barley-based diets varying in dietary crude protein concentration and rumen degradability.

K M Koenig1, S M McGinn, K A Beauchemin.   

Abstract

Crossbred beef steers (n = 312) were used in an experiment with a completely randomized design during the growing (235 ± 1.6 kg initial BW) and finishing (363 ± 2.7 kg) phase to determine the effects of dietary CP concentration and rumen degradability on NH3-N emissions, growth performance, and carcass traits. Diets were barley based and consisted of 55% silage and 45% concentrate in the backgrounding phase and 9% silage and 91% concentrate in the finishing phase. For each phase, there were 4 dietary treatments (6 pens of 13 cattle per diet): the basal diet with no protein supplementation (12% CP backgrounding and 12.6% CP finishing) or supplemented (14% CP) with urea (UREA), urea and canola meal (UREA+CM), or urea, corn gluten meal, and xylose-treated soybean meal (UREA+CGM+xSBM). Feed intake and BW of cattle were measured at 3-wk intervals. One pen of steers fed the 12 or 12.6% CP and 1 pen fed 1 of the 14% CP diets were housed in 2 isolated pens to quantify NH3-N emissions using the integrated horizontal flux technique with passive NH3 samplers. In the backgrounding phase final BW, ADG, and G:F were less (P < 0.05) in cattle fed the 12% CP and UREA compared with the UREA+CM and UREA+CGM+xSBM diets. Nitrogen-use efficiency of cattle fed UREA+CM and UREA+CGM+xSBM was equal to that of cattle fed 12% CP and averaged 19.8%. In the finishing phase, there was no effect (P > 0.10) of CP supplementation on BW, DMI, ADG, G:F, N-use efficiency, and carcass traits. The NH3-N emissions from December to February during the backgrounding phase ranged from 4.3 to 25.6 g N/(steer•d) and 3.8 to 16.3% of N intake and from April to July during the finishing phase ranged from 9.7 to 76.4 g N/(steer•d) and 4.4 to 26.7% of N intake. Differences in NH3-N emissions between the pens of cattle fed the backgrounding diets with 12 and 14% CP were not detected. For cattle fed the 12.6 and 14% CP finishing diets, NH3-N emissions tended (P ≤ 0.16) to be less for 2 of the 5 periods and averaged 14.4 and 28.1 g N/(steer•d) and 7.7 and 12.7% of N intake, respectively. The NH3-N emitted as a % of N intake averaged 42% less for cattle fed 12.6% compared with 14% CP. Feeding the barley-based concentrate diet to finishing cattle with 12.6% compared with 14% CP diets reduced NH3-N emissions with no effect on performance. Feeding the barley-based forage diet to backgrounding cattle with 12% CP, however, reduced performance compared with growing cattle fed supplementary degradable and undegradable true protein.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23478824     DOI: 10.2527/jas.2012-5651

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Anim Sci        ISSN: 0021-8812            Impact factor:   3.159


  11 in total

1.  Effect of inclusion rate of Fermenten on performance, carcass traits, and apparent total tract digestibility of growing Angus crossbred steers.

Authors:  Mariana Eloisa Garcia-Ascolani; Tessa M Schulmeister; Martin Ruiz-Moreno; Darren D Henry; Francine M Ciriaco; Gleise M Silva; Elliot Block; Jose C B Dubeux; Graham C Lamb; Nicolas DiLorenzo
Journal:  J Anim Sci       Date:  2019-02-01       Impact factor: 3.159

2.  Use of gallic acid and hydrolyzable tannins to reduce methane emission and nitrogen excretion in beef cattle fed a diet containing alfalfa silage1,2.

Authors:  Isaac A Aboagye; Masahito Oba; Karen M Koenig; Guangyong Y Zhao; Karen A Beauchemin
Journal:  J Anim Sci       Date:  2019-04-29       Impact factor: 3.159

3.  Effects of rumen undegradable protein sources on nitrous oxide, methane and ammonia emission from the manure of feedlot-finished cattle.

Authors:  Larissa de Melo Coelho; Liziane de Figueiredo Brito; Juliana Duarte Messana; Abmael da Silva Cardoso; Geovany Macêdo Carvalho; Rodrigo de Nazaré Santos Torres; Roberta Souto Carlos; Euclides Braga Malheiros; Mara Cristina Pessôa da Cruz; Telma Teresinha Berchielli
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2022-06-02       Impact factor: 4.996

4.  Increasing dietary proportion of wheat grain in finishing diets containing distillers' grains: impact on nitrogen utilization, ruminal pH, and digestive function.

Authors:  Cody N Ream; Gwinyai E Chibisa
Journal:  J Anim Sci       Date:  2021-10-01       Impact factor: 3.338

5.  Feeding condensed tannins to mitigate ammonia emissions from beef feedlot cattle fed high-protein finishing diets containing distillers grains.

Authors:  Karen M Koenig; Karen A Beauchemin; Sean M McGinn
Journal:  J Anim Sci       Date:  2018-09-29       Impact factor: 3.159

6.  Effect of feeding condensed tannins in high protein finishing diets containing corn distillers grains on ruminal fermentation, nutrient digestibility, and route of nitrogen excretion in beef cattle.

Authors:  Karen M Koenig; Karen A Beauchemin
Journal:  J Anim Sci       Date:  2018-09-29       Impact factor: 3.159

7.  Effects of hydrolyzable tannin with or without condensed tannin on methane emissions, nitrogen use, and performance of beef cattle fed a high-forage diet.

Authors:  Isaac A Aboagye; Masahito Oba; Alejandro Ramon Castillo; Karen M Koenig; Alan D Iwaasa; Karen Ann Beauchemin
Journal:  J Anim Sci       Date:  2018-12-03       Impact factor: 3.159

8.  In Vitro Assessment of Enteric Methane Emission Potential of Whole-Plant Barley, Oat, Triticale and Wheat.

Authors:  Isaac A Aboagye; Christine L Rosser; Vern S Baron; Karen A Beauchemin
Journal:  Animals (Basel)       Date:  2021-02-09       Impact factor: 2.752

9.  Effects of feeding lubabegron on gas emissions, growth performance, and carcass characteristics of beef cattle housed in small-pen environmentally monitored enclosures during the last 3 mo of the finishing period.

Authors:  J Scott Teeter; Samantha J Werth; Sandra L Gruber; John C Kube; Jacob A Hagenmaier; Janet B Allen; Cory T Herr; Michael S Brown; Dustin Boler; Anna C Dilger; Yongjing Zhao; Yuee Pan; Frank M Mitloehner
Journal:  J Anim Sci       Date:  2021-12-01       Impact factor: 3.159

10.  Optimum roughage proportion in barley-based feedlot cattle diets: growth performance, feeding behavior, and carcass traits.

Authors:  Karen M Koenig; Gwinyai E Chibisa; Gregory B Penner; Karen A Beauchemin
Journal:  J Anim Sci       Date:  2020-10-01       Impact factor: 3.159

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