PRESS RELEASE:
11-13-09
WH
Miner Institute: Catherine Ballard, 518-846-7121x112; Kurt Cotanch x123
NNYADP Co-Chairs: Joe Giroux: 518-565-4730; Jon Greenwood, 315-386-3231
How Does
Later Corn Harvest Impact Cow Health, Milk Production?
Chazy, NY - By farmer request, the Northern New York Agricultural
Development Program has begun research to evaluate the impact of later-harvested
corn on cow digestive health and milk production efficiency. The high cost of
grain (particularly cornmeal in recent years) along with the weather causing
harvest delays has raised concern for maximizing on-farm production of energy in
the form of corn. Some dairy consultants are recommending farmers delay harvest
to capture more starch in their corn silage crop.
In 2009, the farmers who guide the small grants program of the Northern New York
Agricultural Development Program requested the research that is being conducted
at the W.H. Miner Agricultural Research Institute in Chazy, NY. They identified
the evaluation of the impact of corn maturity at harvest on nutrient
composition, starch and fiber digestibility, and protein solubility of different
corn hybrids as a priority project.
Northern New York Agricultural Development Program Co-Chair and dairyman Joe
Giroux says, “The most critical factor of this research will be in knowing the
impact of the later-ensiled corn silage on the nutritional quality of the final
silage, which ultimately affects cows’ rumen health and farm profitability.”
W.H. Miner Agricultural Research Institute Director of Research Catherine S.
Ballard and Miner Institute Forage Lab Director Kurt W. Cotanch are project
leaders.
Ballard says, “Some consultants have suggested delaying harvest until the
corn’s whole plant dry matter approaches forty percent. The reasoning is that
corn starch deposition into the kernels is maximized, and nutrient loss is
higher in corn ensiled at lower dry matter percentages with a resulting loss in
milk production value. Whole-plant corn silage harvested at a higher percentage
of dry matter (35-38%DM) may provide more energy in the form of starch. This, in
turn, decreases the need for purchased grain.”
Whole-plant corn harvesting processes the entire stalk of corn into silage for
feeding to dairy cows. As plants mature, the corn stalk decreases in
digestibility for dairy cows. The amount of time silage spends in a silo
influences protein solubility and starch content. These changes impact how dairy
farmers and nutrition consultants formulate feed rations.
Cotanch says, “The increase in ruminal starch degradation over time in the
silo could lead to silage rations that have a higher chance of causing subacute
ruminal acidosis.”
In plain terms, subacute ruminal acidosis is an acid stomach in cows. This
condition leads to decreased milk production, efficiency, and weight loss,
which, in turn, results in untimely loss of cows from the milking herd and
economic loss to the farm.
The NNYADP-funded research will also determine if the increase in net energy in
lactation in whole-plant corn silage attained by harvesting more mature corn may
result in more milk per acre.
The Northern New York Agricultural Development Program is a farmer-driven
initiative to ensure the long term economic vitality of Northern NY’s
agricultural production sector and agriculture’s important contributions to
the protection and enhancement of the region’s environment and rich natural
resource base and to communities in New York State’s six northernmost
counties.
Learn more about dairy industry research by contacting your local Cornell
Cooperative Extension or W.H. Miner Agricultural Research Institute, or on the
Northern New York Agricultural Development Program website at www.nnyagdev.org
<http://www.nnyagdev.org> . # # #
Background:
The Northern New York Agricultural
Development Program awards grants for practical on-farm research, outreach and
technical assistance and is supported by funds from the New York State
Legislature through the long term support of the North Country’s State
Senators, and with the support of NYS Assemblypersons from the region and other
areas of the state.
The program receives support (funds, time, land, expertise, etc.) from Cornell
University’s College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, the Cornell University
Agricultural Experiment Station, NYS Agricultural Experiment Station in Geneva,
six Northern New York Cornell Cooperative Extension Associations, W. H. Miner
Agricultural Research Institute, U.S. Department of Agriculture, New York State
Department of Agriculture and Markets, cooperating farms, agribusinesses across
the region, and others.
The Northern New York Agricultural Development Program is co-chaired by Joe
Giroux and St. Lawrence County dairyman Jon Greenwood. # # #