
Scientists Sleuth Forage SecretsBy Marcia Wood September 28, 1999How do certain forage plants coax cattle, sheep and goats into coming back
for more? Scientists at the Agricultural
Research Service are sleuthing the secrets of how to tempt the palates of
these ruminants. Knowing more about the culinary cues should mean healthier animals that make
better weight gains and bigger profits. Research studies should also help plant
breeders develop new forages that appeal to animals, according to ARS soil
scientist Henry F.
Mayland. He leads the forage-preferences investigations at the agency's
Northwest Irrigation and Soils Research
Laboratory in Kimberly, Idaho. Earlier, Mayland and ARS colleagues Dwight S. Fisher at Watkinsville, Ga.,
and Joseph C. Burns at Raleigh, N.C., showed that cattle, sheep and goats
prefer tall fescue hays harvested in the afternoon to tall fescues cut in the
morning. Their study was likely the first to show up to a 50-percent difference
in forage preferences based on time of cutting. See earlier
story about grass hay
preferencesNow, follow-up studies by ARS scientists and
their university colleagues are showing the same trend with alfalfa hay. Animals apparently discriminate on the basis of total nonstructural
carbohydrates, that is, easily digestible starches and sugars, in the forage. Other experiments to probe chemical and physical characteristics of forages
indicate that cattle prefer tall fescues with high levels of a natural chemical
known as 6-methyl-5-hepten-2-one. Investigations probing the influence of minerals like calcium, magnesium and
potassium on animals forage choices are also underway. For details, see
the story in the September issue of Agricultural Research magazine on
the World Wide Web at: http://www.ars.usda.gov/is/AR/archive/sep99/buds0999.htm ARS is the chief research agency of the U.S.
Department of Agriculture. Scientific contact: Henry F. Mayland, ARS
Northwest Irrigation and Soils Research
Laboratory, Kimberly, Idaho, phone (208) 423-6517, fax (208) 423-6555,
[email protected].
Story contacts Northwest Irrigation and Soils Research Marcia A Wood U.S. Department of Agriculture | |