1 / 17

Livestock Nutrition Considerations and Application

Livestock Nutrition Considerations and Application. Adv Animal Science Sutherlin High School. Beef Nutrition. Considerations NEL = Net Energy, Lactation NEG = Net Energy, Growth NEM = Net Energy, Maintenance. Beef Nutrition. Considerations Ruminants Foreign objects (Hardware disease).

belle
Download Presentation

Livestock Nutrition Considerations and Application

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Livestock NutritionConsiderations and Application Adv Animal Science Sutherlin High School

  2. Beef Nutrition • Considerations • NEL = Net Energy, Lactation • NEG = Net Energy, Growth • NEM = Net Energy, Maintenance

  3. Beef Nutrition • Considerations • Ruminants • Foreign objects (Hardware disease)

  4. Beef Nutrition • Issues • Grass Tetany: magnesium deficiency usually caused by cattle on spring (fast-growing) grass • Bloat: build up of rumen gas • Acidosis: pH imbalance of the rumen

  5. Beef Nutrition • Management • You’re feeding a market steer that is 900 pounds. If you are feeding 15 pounds of mature grass hay, what is the maximum Mcal you could feed per day?

  6. Swine Nutrition • Considerations • Simple stomachs • Essential Amino acids • Chelates: combining minerals with amino acids (zinc-methionine, iron-lysine)

  7. Swine Nutrition • Management • You are feeding market hogs. Prepare the most economical ration of two feeds that meet the protein requirements and Ca requirements.

  8. Sheep Nutrition • Considerations • Ruminants (forages needed – avoid acidosis) • Supplement with minerals • Don’t use cattle minerals (too much Copper)

  9. Sheep Nutrition • Nutrition Issues • White Muscle Disease: deficiency of Selenium • Urinary Calculi (Water Belly): phosphate salts from high-concentrate diets; feed medicated feeds

  10. Sheep Nutrition • Nutrition Issues • Enterotoxemia (Overeating Disease, Pulpy Kidney): caused by Clostridium perfringens • Copper Toxemia: too much copper, fatal

  11. Sheep Nutrition • Management • Calculate a ration for 100 pound market lambs that does not exceed the phosphorous requirements but does meet the requirement for TDN.

  12. Horse Nutrition • Considerations • Modified monogastrics – hind-gut fermenters • HYPP and alfalfa (potassium)

  13. Horse Nutrition • Issues • Founder: sore-footed, often found in horses on spring grass • Colic: abdominal pain, can be caused by nutrition • Ryegrass Staggers: toxins in ryegrass leaves

  14. Horse Nutrition • Management • Develop a ration for maintaining 900 pound mares that will meet TDN requirements without exceeding DE by more than 3%.

  15. Dairy Cattle Nutrition • Considerations • TMR = total mixed ration • Dry cows versus Lactating cows

  16. Dairy Cattle Nutrition • Issues • Milk Fever (parturent paresis or hypocalcemia): within 2-3 days of calving, symptoms include staggering, tremors (involves potassium balance with calcium)

  17. Dairy Cattle Nutrition • Management • Your cows are eating 30 pounds of TMR a day per head. Develop a ration that involves two feeds and your choice of supplement to meet Calcium and TDN requirements.

More Related