Abstract

The experiment was carried out to evaluate the possibility of ensiling common vetch - oat mixtures sown at five different seeding rates. Two effects were studied: seeding rate of common vetch and oat in the mixtures and application of bacterial inoculant. The pH, DM (Dry Matter) content, ammonia nitrogen, soluble nitrogen, lactic, acetic and butyric acids were determined on silages. DLG method was utilized for classification the silage quality. Common vetch and oat were grown in binary mixtures at the experimental field of the Institute for forage crops, Krusevac - Serbia, and were tested at five different mixture rates: pure vetch, 25% vetch + 75% oat, 50% vetch + 50% oat, 75% vetch + 25% oat and pure oat. Application of bacterial inoculant affected higher content of ammonia nitrogen and acetic acid (P< 0.05), but lower content of soluble nitrogen (P< 0.05). Depending on the seeding rates of common vetch and oat, 75 : 25 common vetch - oat silage had the highest content of lactic acid and the lowest content of butyric acid. Contents of DM, pH and ammonia nitrogen were similar in all silages ranged from 307.2 to 318.5 g kg-1, from 4.27 to 4.54 and from 16.1 to 19.1% ?N, respectively. According to the DLG method for silage quality evaluation, similar quality grades were founded.

Highlights

  • Good quality silage and hay are important for the nutrition of ruminants, as well as for the quality and safety of dairy products

  • The experiment was carried out to evaluate the possibility of ensiling common vetch – oat mixtures sown at five different seeding rates

  • Depending on the seeding rate of common vetch and oat in the mixtures, DM content increased from 307.2 g kg-1 in pure common vetch silage to 318.5 g kg-1 in pure oat silage

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Summary

Introduction

Good quality silage and hay are important for the nutrition of ruminants, as well as for the quality and safety of dairy products. The conservation process involves many steps that should be managed carefully to ensure good quality. This starts in the crop composition, continues with harvest, ensiling, and feed out management and is influenced by additives. In terms of the nutritive value of the forage, the crop composition at harvest has a major impact on the ensiling process and quality of silage (Buxton and OKiely, 2003). Đorđević et al (2011) reported that bacterial-enzyme additives reduce fiber and increase the concentration of sugar and lactic acid and digestibility of silage. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the fermentative characteristics of common vetch-oat silages depending on different seeding rate in the mixtures and application of inoculant

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