Aerobic stability of native tropical grasses and grain sorghum silage stored at different temperatures

In two experiments the effect of storage temperature on aerobic stability of silages of native tropical grasses (NTG) treated with a lactic acid-producing bacterial inoculant and of grain sorghum was evaluated. In Exp. 1, NTG were harvested at 30% DM, chopped, and packed into PVC lab scale micro-silos (1.8 kg net). Ensiled material was stored at room (RT, 28-30ºC) or controlled (CT, 20-22ºC) temperature and assigned to one of four treatments: no additive at RT, inoculant at RT, no additive at CT, and inoculant at CT. Three silos per treatment were prepared and analyzed for initial pH. Silage mass temperature was monitored daily during the fermentation period (30 d). Silage from the opened silos was exposed to aerobic conditions for 3 d and analyzed for pH, in vitro dry matter degradability (IVDMD) and dry matter recovery (DMR). Final pH and silage mass temperature during the entire fermentation period were lower (P<.01) in NTG stored at CT than at RT. However, pH, IVDMD, and DMR were similar (P>.05) for all treatments after 3 d of aerobic exposure, regardless of addition of the bacterial inoculant. In Exp. 2, second cutting grain sorghum (28.25 DM%) was harvested at 75 d of growth, chopped and packed into micro-silos, twelve of which were stored at RT and 12 at CT (as above) during the fermentation process (FP). After 60 d of ensiling, three silos from each temperature were opened and silage exposed to aerobic conditions for 3 d at the same FP temperature. The other six silos were exposed to air at the temperature inverse to that of the FP. Silage exposed to air at CT had lower (P<.01) pH and higher (P<.01) IVDMD and DMR than that exposed at RT during the entire aerobic exposure period. After 1 and 3 d of aerobic exposure, temperature was lower (P<.01) in silage at CT than in that at RT. These results demonstrate the detrimental effect of high storage temperature on the aerobic stability of NTG and grain sorghum silage.

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Main Authors: Rodríguez, Abner A., Gonzalez, G., Acevedo, J. A., Riquelme, E. O.
Format: Digital revista
Language:en; pt
Published: Asociacion Latinoamericana de Produccion Animal 2005
Online Access:https://ojs.alpa.uy/index.php/ojs_files/article/view/243
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spelling oai:ojs.ojs.alpa.uy:article-2432022-01-06T04:50:05Z Aerobic stability of native tropical grasses and grain sorghum silage stored at different temperatures Rodríguez, Abner A. Gonzalez, G. Acevedo, J. A. Riquelme, E. O. Silage storage temperature aerobic stability native tropical grasses grain sorghum bacterial inoculant In two experiments the effect of storage temperature on aerobic stability of silages of native tropical grasses (NTG) treated with a lactic acid-producing bacterial inoculant and of grain sorghum was evaluated. In Exp. 1, NTG were harvested at 30% DM, chopped, and packed into PVC lab scale micro-silos (1.8 kg net). Ensiled material was stored at room (RT, 28-30ºC) or controlled (CT, 20-22ºC) temperature and assigned to one of four treatments: no additive at RT, inoculant at RT, no additive at CT, and inoculant at CT. Three silos per treatment were prepared and analyzed for initial pH. Silage mass temperature was monitored daily during the fermentation period (30 d). Silage from the opened silos was exposed to aerobic conditions for 3 d and analyzed for pH, in vitro dry matter degradability (IVDMD) and dry matter recovery (DMR). Final pH and silage mass temperature during the entire fermentation period were lower (P<.01) in NTG stored at CT than at RT. However, pH, IVDMD, and DMR were similar (P>.05) for all treatments after 3 d of aerobic exposure, regardless of addition of the bacterial inoculant. In Exp. 2, second cutting grain sorghum (28.25 DM%) was harvested at 75 d of growth, chopped and packed into micro-silos, twelve of which were stored at RT and 12 at CT (as above) during the fermentation process (FP). After 60 d of ensiling, three silos from each temperature were opened and silage exposed to aerobic conditions for 3 d at the same FP temperature. The other six silos were exposed to air at the temperature inverse to that of the FP. Silage exposed to air at CT had lower (P<.01) pH and higher (P<.01) IVDMD and DMR than that exposed at RT during the entire aerobic exposure period. After 1 and 3 d of aerobic exposure, temperature was lower (P<.01) in silage at CT than in that at RT. These results demonstrate the detrimental effect of high storage temperature on the aerobic stability of NTG and grain sorghum silage. Asociacion Latinoamericana de Produccion Animal 2005-03-13 info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion Articulo cientifico original Texto https://ojs.alpa.uy/index.php/ojs_files/article/view/243 Latin American Archives of Animal Production; Vol. 7 No. 1 (1999) Archivos Latinoamericanos de Producción Animal; Vol. 7 Núm. 1 (1999) 2075-8359 1022-1301 en; pt
institution ALPA
collection OJS
country Uruguay
countrycode UY
component Revista
access En linea
databasecode rev-alpa
tag revista
region America del Sur
libraryname Biblioteca ALPA
language en; pt
format Digital
author Rodríguez, Abner A.
Gonzalez, G.
Acevedo, J. A.
Riquelme, E. O.
spellingShingle Rodríguez, Abner A.
Gonzalez, G.
Acevedo, J. A.
Riquelme, E. O.
Aerobic stability of native tropical grasses and grain sorghum silage stored at different temperatures
author_facet Rodríguez, Abner A.
Gonzalez, G.
Acevedo, J. A.
Riquelme, E. O.
author_sort Rodríguez, Abner A.
title Aerobic stability of native tropical grasses and grain sorghum silage stored at different temperatures
title_short Aerobic stability of native tropical grasses and grain sorghum silage stored at different temperatures
title_full Aerobic stability of native tropical grasses and grain sorghum silage stored at different temperatures
title_fullStr Aerobic stability of native tropical grasses and grain sorghum silage stored at different temperatures
title_full_unstemmed Aerobic stability of native tropical grasses and grain sorghum silage stored at different temperatures
title_sort aerobic stability of native tropical grasses and grain sorghum silage stored at different temperatures
description In two experiments the effect of storage temperature on aerobic stability of silages of native tropical grasses (NTG) treated with a lactic acid-producing bacterial inoculant and of grain sorghum was evaluated. In Exp. 1, NTG were harvested at 30% DM, chopped, and packed into PVC lab scale micro-silos (1.8 kg net). Ensiled material was stored at room (RT, 28-30ºC) or controlled (CT, 20-22ºC) temperature and assigned to one of four treatments: no additive at RT, inoculant at RT, no additive at CT, and inoculant at CT. Three silos per treatment were prepared and analyzed for initial pH. Silage mass temperature was monitored daily during the fermentation period (30 d). Silage from the opened silos was exposed to aerobic conditions for 3 d and analyzed for pH, in vitro dry matter degradability (IVDMD) and dry matter recovery (DMR). Final pH and silage mass temperature during the entire fermentation period were lower (P<.01) in NTG stored at CT than at RT. However, pH, IVDMD, and DMR were similar (P>.05) for all treatments after 3 d of aerobic exposure, regardless of addition of the bacterial inoculant. In Exp. 2, second cutting grain sorghum (28.25 DM%) was harvested at 75 d of growth, chopped and packed into micro-silos, twelve of which were stored at RT and 12 at CT (as above) during the fermentation process (FP). After 60 d of ensiling, three silos from each temperature were opened and silage exposed to aerobic conditions for 3 d at the same FP temperature. The other six silos were exposed to air at the temperature inverse to that of the FP. Silage exposed to air at CT had lower (P<.01) pH and higher (P<.01) IVDMD and DMR than that exposed at RT during the entire aerobic exposure period. After 1 and 3 d of aerobic exposure, temperature was lower (P<.01) in silage at CT than in that at RT. These results demonstrate the detrimental effect of high storage temperature on the aerobic stability of NTG and grain sorghum silage.
publisher Asociacion Latinoamericana de Produccion Animal
publishDate 2005
url https://ojs.alpa.uy/index.php/ojs_files/article/view/243
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