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Producers reminded to get feed tests done

As hay and other forages make their way into your feed storage area this fall, you might want to consider forage testing. Forage testing has value for your operation, it can be a useful tool for maximizing livestock production and can minimize feed costs. Testing forages not only helps determine if livestock requirements are being met, it also determines whether you need to supplement or could mix off with lower quality forages to avoid overfeeding.

Forage analysis is useful when looking at inventories and planning for winter feeding. If forage quality is high enough, there may be an opportunity to mix it with straw, thus stretching supplies and lowering overall feed costs. If forage quality is lacking in certain nutrients, it will be necessary to bring in some type of concentrate product such as cereal grain, screenings, dried distillers grains or canola meal for example, in order to maintain body condition of livestock on feed.

 

Generally, forage analysis should include the following parameters: moisture, dry matter, crude protein, acid and neutral detergent fibre, calcium, phosphorus, magnesium, potassium and sodium. In addition to these, the analysis will include a variety of energy estimates which may be reported as total digestible nutrients (TDN), digestible energy or net energy. Each of these nutrients play a role in the overall quality of the forage being tested.

There are book values for many types of forages and other feeds, however, actual results can vary substantially and the cost of that variability can be high. If we balance a ration on book values and the energy value of your primary forage source was five percent lower than the book value, we could create a situation where pregnant females are losing body condition rather than maintaining or gaining the condition that we had prepared for. This is especially true as weather turns colder and females advance to the later stages of pregnancy.

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Wes Lee, OSU Extension Mesonet agricultural coordinator, says these warmer and dryer fall conditions could become the new norm for Oklahoma. State climatologist Gary McManus predicts more of the same during the weeks ahead.