Because of this year’s drought, U.S. cattle farmers are facing a short feed
supply. Farmers searching for affordable feedstuffs should consider ammoniating
low-quality forages, like corn stalks, to supplement their feeding programs,
says a University of Missouri agriculture business specialist.
“Ammoniating low-quality forage produces several benefits,” said Whitney
Wiegel. “Ammoniation increases the digestibility and crude protein content of
forage. It also improves intake and inhibits mold development in high-moisture
roughage.”
Farmers who choose to ammoniate low-quality forage (forages with less than
50 percent total digestible nutrients) can expect digestibility to increase 8 to
18 percent depending on the type of forage ammoniated and its initial
digestibility level, he said.
Ammoniation can also increase crude protein content by 4.5 to 11 percent
and improve dry-matter intake by more than 30 percent.
“Because intake is one of cattle producers’ biggest concerns when it comes
to meeting cows’ nutritional requirements with forage, dry-matter intake is
probably the greatest benefit of ammoniation,” Wiegel said.
While there are many benefits to ammoniation, a farmer must also consider
the added costs of ammoniating forages. “With regard to material costs, the main
items required are anhydrous ammonia, polyethylene sheeting, tubing and tractor
fuel,” he said. Farmers may also wish to include the cost of labor in their
calculations. “Of all the costs, the cost anhydrous ammonia will undoubtedly be
the greatest.”
To add further detail to the cost analysis, Wiegel describes a typical
scenario:
Using a 40- by 100-foot sheet of black polyethylene, which costs $180, a
farmer can ammoniate about 70 large round bales. If each bale weighs 1,000
pounds, the farmer has 70,000 pounds of forage. If the bales are 85 percent dry
matter, the farmer has 59,500 pounds of dry matter. If the recommended amount of
anhydrous to use is 3 percent of the dry-matter weight, the farmer needs to use
1,785 pounds of anhydrous.
“The price of anhydrous ammonia in this example is $720 per ton, which
means that it costs $643 to purchase the recommended amount of anhydrous,”
Wiegel said. If tubing supplies cost $50, tractor fuel costs $38, and labor
costs $180, the total cost of ammoniation is $1,091, or $31 per ton of
forage.
Will the increase in quality be worth the extra cost of ammoniation?
“To quantify the value of improved quality, reference values for TDN and
crude protein must be obtained,” he said.
In this scenario, Wiegel assumes that a pound of TDN from corn is worth 15
cents and a pound of crude protein from soybean meal is worth 31 cents (based on
an $8 per bushel corn price and a $537 per ton price for soybean meal).
If ammoniation improves TDN by 5 percent and crude protein by 8 percent, an
equivalent of 100 pounds of TDN and 160 pounds of crude protein are added to a
ton of forage through ammoniation.
Using the reference values of 15 cents per pound of TDN and 31 cents per
pound of crude protein, ammoniation increases the value of forage by $55 per ton
on a dry-matter basis, or $47 per ton with forage at 85 percent dry
matter.
“Compared to ammoniation costs of $31 per ton, the value added to forage,
$47 per ton, is enough to justify the decision to ammoniate low-quality forage,”
he said.
For more information about ammoniating forages, contact your local MU
Extension center.
“There are several important considerations in ammoniating forages, so
please seek advice before ammoniating forages for the first time,” Wiegel
said.
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