By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- A two-year trial pitted kenaf against pearl millet
and a mix of dallisgrass and bermudagrass to see which
forage brought the best results in cattle
production. More
questions may have been raised than were answered, and
Mississippi State University researchers would like to
conduct the tests over a few more years to learn
more. Kenaf
is a non-native annual that produces tremendous forage mass.
It has a main stem with leaves that branch off it, and gets
fibrous if allowed to grow too tall. It is often used as an
industrial fiber, but has many nutrients valuable for cattle
growth. Pearl
millet is an annual similar to kenaf but more grassy. It is
already used extensively in the state as a forage.
Dallisgrass and bermudagrass are perennial summer
forages. Brian
Rude, Mississippi Agricultural and Forestry Experiment
Station ruminant nutritionist with MSU's Animal and Dairy
Science Department, conducted the tests on MSU's South Farm
in 1998 and 1999. He worked with Brian Baldwin, MAFES
agronomist in the Plant and Soil Sciences
Department. "We
chose to study kenaf because of the forage mass it produces.
The nutrient crop is very good, it is pretty high in protein
and the energy appears to be fairly available," Rude
said. Kenaf
appeared to be an acquired taste for cattle, similar to
people learning to drink coffee. "Once
they got adapted to eating kenaf, they ate it well, and once
they liked it, they actually preferred it to the other
forages available," Rude said. There
was a lot of rain the first year of the study, allowing the
kenaf to grow quicker than the cattle grazed it down. The
second year had drought-like conditions. During the first
year, 72 steers grazed the three test plots for 56 days. In
the second year, 45 steers grazed the three plots for 84
days. Researchers
looked for cattle weight gain during both trial years, and
at the forage's digestibility the first year. "Average
daily gain during the first trial for steers grazing pearl
millet was faster than those grazing dallisgrass or kenaf,"
Rude said. "Results of the second year's grazing study
showed the greatest daily gain on kenaf, followed by pearl
millet and then dallisgrass." Rude
speculated that kenaf did not perform as well the first year
because of less-than-ideal plot management and rain that
caused it to grow quickly and get woody. The second year,
researchers managed each of the forage plots for optimum
performance, and cattle grazed on the kenaf while it was
more leafy. Another
unusual result that surfaced involved digestibility. When
calculated the first year, steers consuming millet appeared
to digest and use nutrients more efficiently than those
which fed on kenaf or dallisgrass, yet those feeding on
kenaf had the best weight gain. "The
kenaf had a lower digestibility, but the cattle gained
quicker, probably because the digestibility study grinds up
both the stalk and the leaves while the cattle just graze
the leaf and probably don't eat the stalks," Rude said.
"Energy is probably readily available in the leaf. We'd like
to pursue this in other studies." In the
study, all three forages were fertilized annually, but kenaf
was the most expensive and had to be reestablished each
year. Pearl millet is another annual, but the seed is less
expensive than kenaf seed. However, researchers found that
kenaf can graze eight animals per acre and pearl millet can
graze six to seven, while traditional summer forages such as
dallisgrass and bermudagrass can graze just two per
acre. "Kenaf
can carry more animals per acre and they will gain weight
faster. That offsets the additional cost of the forage,"
Rude said. "In our study, it was cost beneficial to use
kenaf. With more research, we can isolate management
practices we need to follow to be more consistent and
precise." Rude
said kenaf is not the answer to grazing issues in
Mississippi, but it has promise. He suggested that small
farms and those with diversified enterprises may benefit
most from raising kenaf as either a fiber or a forage,
depending on market prices. Released:
Aug. 27, 2001
Mississippi
Agricultural News:
Kenaf studied as
alternate forage
For more information, contact: Dr. Brian Rude, (662)
325-2933
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:25:39
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/agnews/an01/010827.html
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