Abstract

Abstract Grazing wheat pasture with growing calves is an economically important enterprise in the Southern Great Plains and Southeastern U.S. Wheat forage is available when there are few other high quality forage options, and a offers a favorable seasonality of net returns for the stocker cattle enterprise. Our objective was to determine if a moderate quality wrapped round bale silage can be used to profitably increase stocking rates during the fall and winter. This research was conducted at the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture Livestock & Forestry Research Station near Batesville, AR (35°50′N, 91°48′W; elevation 150 m) over 3-yr from fall 2018 to spring 2021. Treatments were: HCON, where steers were stocked at 2.47 steers/ha in the fall without bermudagrass baleage or were stocked at 1× (H1.0), 1.5× (H1.5), or 2× (H2.0) the HCON stocking rate with ad libitum access to bermudagrass round bale wrapped silage during the fall. In the spring all pastures were stocked at 5.56 steers/ha without baleage (HCON) or with access to baleage (H1.0, H1.5, H2.0). Steer performance, forage mass and nutritive quality were analyzed as a randomized complete block design with SAS 9.4 (SAS Inst. Inc. Cary, NC). The bermudagrass baleage was analyzed to be 48.8% DM in yr 1, 40.2% DM in yr 2, and 46.8% DM in yr 3; and ranged from 13 to 14% CP and 55 to 56% TDN across the 3-yr (Table 1). Baleage intake based on estimated disappearance from feeders increased (P < 0.01) with increasing stocking rate in the fall and tended (P = 0.07) to increase during the spring with increased fall stocking rate. Steer ADG showed a positive associative effect of baleage feeding in the fall with greater (P = 0.01) ADG for H1.0 than HCON, while HCON and H1.5 did not differ (P = 0.71), but were greater (P ≤ 0.03) than H2.0. Gain per hectare in the fall tended (P = 0.06) to be greater for H1.0 than HCON, H1.5 and H2.0 were greater (P < 0.01) than H1.0 but did not differ from each other. Performance and BW did not differ (P ≥ 0.73) during the spring, but steer grazing days/ha and BW gain/ha were greater when baleage was offered in the spring compared with HCON. Supplemental efficiency of feeding silage did not differ (P ≥ 0.47) among treatments, on the average gains were increased by 0.22 kg/kg baleage DM fed in the fall and 0.11 kg/kg baleage DM in the spring. Offering moderate quality warm-season grass baleage to steers on wheat pasture enabled increased stocking rates in the fall while maintaining acceptable levels of performance and extending the length of the grazing season in the spring.

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