Nutritive value of potato processing wastes in total mixed rations for dairy cattle.

The nutritive value of wet potato processing waste for dairy cattle was determined in two experiments. In Experiment 1, rations contained, on a dry matter basis, 0, 10, 15, and 20% potato waste and were substituted for high moisture corn in diets for 32 lactating Holstein cows for 12 wk. Substituting potato waste for corn did not significantly affect milk yield, milk composition, milk production persistency, or dry matter intake. Cows fed 20% potato waste tended to decrease in milk fat percent and to shift molar proportions of rumen volatile fatty acids toward a decrease in acetate: propionate ratio. In Experiment 2, six steers were used in a 3 X 3 Latin square design to test digestibility and nitrogen utilization of potato waste substituted for high moisture corn at 0, 10, and 20% of the ration dry matter. A second group of four steers with rumen fistulas were used in a 4 X 4 Latin square to test rumen fermentation parameters. Diets contained 0, 10, 20, and 30% potato wastes and were similar to Experiment 1. Potato waste did not significantly affect digestibility of crude protein or dry matter, but at 20% substitution digestibility of acid detergent fiber decreased. Rumen ammonia, acetate, acetate to propionate ratios, and total volatile fatty acids were lower at high intakes of potato waste and pH was increased. The shift in rumen fermentation when large amounts of potatoes were fed explains the depressed butter fat on these rations.

[1]  W. A. Cowan,et al.  Use of Corn and Potato Chipping By-Products in Rations for Lactating Dairy Cattle , 1983 .

[2]  J. Huber,et al.  UPGRADING RESIDUES AND BY-PRODUCTS FOR RUMINANTS , 1983 .

[3]  S. Donoghue,et al.  Nutritional status of dairy cows indicated by analysis of blood. , 1982, Journal of dairy science.

[4]  T. Klopfenstein,et al.  Value and Potential Use of Crop Residues and By-Products in Dairy Rations , 1981 .

[5]  J. L. Gill,et al.  Design and analysis of experiments in the animal and medical sciences , 1980 .

[6]  C. Stewart Factors Affecting the Cellulolytic Activity of Rumen Contents , 1977, Applied and environmental microbiology.

[7]  A. Hoogendoorn,et al.  Effects of varying energy and roughage in rations for lactating cows on rumen volatile fatty acids and milk composition. , 1970, Journal of dairy science.

[8]  W. E. Dinusson,et al.  Dried Potato Pulp For Fattening Cattle , 1969 .

[9]  J. Nicholson,et al.  THE DIGESTIBILITY OF POTATO PULP PROTEIN BY SOME SPECIES OF FARM ANIMALS , 1965 .

[10]  Y. Dror,et al.  The influence of levels of protein and starch in rations of sheep on the utilization of protein , 1964, British Journal of Nutrition.

[11]  Van Soest,et al.  Use of detergents in the analysis of fibrous feeds. 2. A rapid method for the determination of fiber and lignin. , 1963 .

[12]  C. Ryan,et al.  An inhibitor of chymotrypsin from Solanum tuberosm and its behavior toward trypsin. , 1962, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.

[13]  A. L. Chaney,et al.  Modified reagents for determination of urea and ammonia. , 1962, Clinical chemistry.

[14]  H. E. Woodman,et al.  Further investigations of the feeding value of artificially dried potatoes: the composition and nutritive value of potato cossettes, potato meal, potato flakes, potato slices and potato dust , 1943, The Journal of Agricultural Science.