Potential of Urochloa grass hybrids as fodder in the Ethiopian highlands

Urochloa grasses have shownpromising results for smallholders to cope with feed shortages in tropical Africa. The objective of this study was to evaluate the performance of two Urochloa hybrids, Mulato‐I and Mulato‐II, in the Ethiopian highlands when managed under different plant spacing and harvesting stages. Treatments included three plant spacings for root splits (0.5 by 0.25 m, 0.5 by 0.5 m, and 0.75 by 0.75 m between rows and plants, respectively) and three harvesting stages: (a) 60 d of growth; (b) 90 d of growth corresponding to 50% bloom, and (c) 120 d of growth (corresponding to full bloom). Experimental plots were laid out in a randomized complete block design with three replications, and observations on the same established stands were made in two consecutive years. Varietal differences were observed in plant height (Mulato‐II: 42 cm; Mulato‐I: 72 cm), and herbage accumulation (Mulato‐II: 3.0 Mg dry matter [DM] ha–1; Mulato‐I: 10.6 Mg DM ha–1). Plant spacing also affected the above variables, but year of harvest influenced herbage accumulation. The rate of herbage accumulation tended to be constant, while that of crude protein (CP) declined and fiber concentration increased significantly with advancing maturity. Overall, the decline in quality at full bloom stage appears to be compensated by the greater herbage accumulation, suggesting that farmers can have enough time window to harvest the forages. While Mulato‐I was superior in herbage accumulation, Mulato‐II was found to be better in forage quality. The two grasses have potential to supply good quality forage provided proper management practices are applied.

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Main Authors: Worku, Mesfin, Lemma, Habtamu, Shawle, Kassa, Adie, Aberra, Duncan, Alan J., Jones, Christopher S., Mekonnen, Kindu, Notenbaert, An Maria Omer, Bezabih, Melkamu
Format: Journal Article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2022-01
Subjects:animal feeding, grasses, mixed farming, herbage crops, livestock,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/114626
https://doi.org/10.1002/agj2.20789
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spelling dig-cgspace-10568-1146262023-10-02T10:16:48Z Potential of Urochloa grass hybrids as fodder in the Ethiopian highlands Worku, Mesfin Lemma, Habtamu Shawle, Kassa Adie, Aberra Duncan, Alan J. Jones, Christopher S. Mekonnen, Kindu Notenbaert, An Maria Omer Bezabih, Melkamu animal feeding grasses mixed farming herbage crops livestock Urochloa grasses have shownpromising results for smallholders to cope with feed shortages in tropical Africa. The objective of this study was to evaluate the performance of two Urochloa hybrids, Mulato‐I and Mulato‐II, in the Ethiopian highlands when managed under different plant spacing and harvesting stages. Treatments included three plant spacings for root splits (0.5 by 0.25 m, 0.5 by 0.5 m, and 0.75 by 0.75 m between rows and plants, respectively) and three harvesting stages: (a) 60 d of growth; (b) 90 d of growth corresponding to 50% bloom, and (c) 120 d of growth (corresponding to full bloom). Experimental plots were laid out in a randomized complete block design with three replications, and observations on the same established stands were made in two consecutive years. Varietal differences were observed in plant height (Mulato‐II: 42 cm; Mulato‐I: 72 cm), and herbage accumulation (Mulato‐II: 3.0 Mg dry matter [DM] ha–1; Mulato‐I: 10.6 Mg DM ha–1). Plant spacing also affected the above variables, but year of harvest influenced herbage accumulation. The rate of herbage accumulation tended to be constant, while that of crude protein (CP) declined and fiber concentration increased significantly with advancing maturity. Overall, the decline in quality at full bloom stage appears to be compensated by the greater herbage accumulation, suggesting that farmers can have enough time window to harvest the forages. While Mulato‐I was superior in herbage accumulation, Mulato‐II was found to be better in forage quality. The two grasses have potential to supply good quality forage provided proper management practices are applied. 2022-01 2021-08-12T06:52:08Z 2021-08-12T06:52:08Z Journal Article Worku, M., Lemma, H., Shawle, K., Adie, A., Duncan, A.J., Jones, C.S., Mekonnen, K., Notenbaert, An, and Bezabih, M. 2022. Potential of Urochloa grass hybrids as fodder in the Ethiopian highlands. Agronomy Journal 114(1): 126-137. 1435-0645 https://hdl.handle.net/10568/114626 https://doi.org/10.1002/agj2.20789 en CC-BY-NC-4.0 Open Access p. 126-137 Wiley Agronomy Journal
institution CGIAR
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cgspace
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Biblioteca del CGIAR
language English
topic animal feeding
grasses
mixed farming
herbage crops
livestock
animal feeding
grasses
mixed farming
herbage crops
livestock
spellingShingle animal feeding
grasses
mixed farming
herbage crops
livestock
animal feeding
grasses
mixed farming
herbage crops
livestock
Worku, Mesfin
Lemma, Habtamu
Shawle, Kassa
Adie, Aberra
Duncan, Alan J.
Jones, Christopher S.
Mekonnen, Kindu
Notenbaert, An Maria Omer
Bezabih, Melkamu
Potential of Urochloa grass hybrids as fodder in the Ethiopian highlands
description Urochloa grasses have shownpromising results for smallholders to cope with feed shortages in tropical Africa. The objective of this study was to evaluate the performance of two Urochloa hybrids, Mulato‐I and Mulato‐II, in the Ethiopian highlands when managed under different plant spacing and harvesting stages. Treatments included three plant spacings for root splits (0.5 by 0.25 m, 0.5 by 0.5 m, and 0.75 by 0.75 m between rows and plants, respectively) and three harvesting stages: (a) 60 d of growth; (b) 90 d of growth corresponding to 50% bloom, and (c) 120 d of growth (corresponding to full bloom). Experimental plots were laid out in a randomized complete block design with three replications, and observations on the same established stands were made in two consecutive years. Varietal differences were observed in plant height (Mulato‐II: 42 cm; Mulato‐I: 72 cm), and herbage accumulation (Mulato‐II: 3.0 Mg dry matter [DM] ha–1; Mulato‐I: 10.6 Mg DM ha–1). Plant spacing also affected the above variables, but year of harvest influenced herbage accumulation. The rate of herbage accumulation tended to be constant, while that of crude protein (CP) declined and fiber concentration increased significantly with advancing maturity. Overall, the decline in quality at full bloom stage appears to be compensated by the greater herbage accumulation, suggesting that farmers can have enough time window to harvest the forages. While Mulato‐I was superior in herbage accumulation, Mulato‐II was found to be better in forage quality. The two grasses have potential to supply good quality forage provided proper management practices are applied.
format Journal Article
topic_facet animal feeding
grasses
mixed farming
herbage crops
livestock
author Worku, Mesfin
Lemma, Habtamu
Shawle, Kassa
Adie, Aberra
Duncan, Alan J.
Jones, Christopher S.
Mekonnen, Kindu
Notenbaert, An Maria Omer
Bezabih, Melkamu
author_facet Worku, Mesfin
Lemma, Habtamu
Shawle, Kassa
Adie, Aberra
Duncan, Alan J.
Jones, Christopher S.
Mekonnen, Kindu
Notenbaert, An Maria Omer
Bezabih, Melkamu
author_sort Worku, Mesfin
title Potential of Urochloa grass hybrids as fodder in the Ethiopian highlands
title_short Potential of Urochloa grass hybrids as fodder in the Ethiopian highlands
title_full Potential of Urochloa grass hybrids as fodder in the Ethiopian highlands
title_fullStr Potential of Urochloa grass hybrids as fodder in the Ethiopian highlands
title_full_unstemmed Potential of Urochloa grass hybrids as fodder in the Ethiopian highlands
title_sort potential of urochloa grass hybrids as fodder in the ethiopian highlands
publisher Wiley
publishDate 2022-01
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/114626
https://doi.org/10.1002/agj2.20789
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