Effect of okara levels on corn grain silage
ABSTRACT We ensiled different levels of okara and ground corn to evaluate the effects on the fermentative pattern, aerobic stability, and chemical composition of resulting silages. The experimental design was completely randomized with four replicates per treatment. The okara levels were (dry matter basis): control (without okara) and 200, 300, 400, and 500 g kg−1 okara, with four replicates per treatment. Control silage did not contain okara, but water was added to adjust the moisture content (400 g kg−1 as fed). Mixtures were ensiled in lab-scale silos and stored for 150 days. Compared with the control silage, okara inclusion linearly increased crude protein (from 89.1 to 251 g kg−1 DM), ether extract (from 39.6 to 136 g kg−1 DM), neutral detergent fiber (from 79.9 to 174 g kg−1 DM), acid detergent fiber (from 22.4 to 119 g kg−1 DM), and ash (from 12.2 to 32.4 g kg−1 DM), whereas decreased dry matter content and in vitro dry matter digestibility (from 830 to 730 g kg−1 DM). The use of okara linearly increased lactic acid concentration but also intensified secondary fermentation. On the other hand, aerobic stability of silages increased due to okara inclusion because of the higher amount of short-chain fatty acids, such as butyric and acetic acids, which accumulated during fermentation. Okara inclusion in corn grain silage must be conditioned to the dry matter content at ensiling, but must not exceed 200 g kg−1 on dry matter basis.
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Sociedade Brasileira de Zootecnia
2020
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oai:scielo:S1516-359820200001005002020-04-30Effect of okara levels on corn grain silageTres,Tamara TaisBueno,Antonio Vinicius IankJobim,Clóves CabreiraDaniel,João Luiz PrattiGritti,Viviane Carnaval ammonia nitrogen butyric acid digestibility fermentation soybean ABSTRACT We ensiled different levels of okara and ground corn to evaluate the effects on the fermentative pattern, aerobic stability, and chemical composition of resulting silages. The experimental design was completely randomized with four replicates per treatment. The okara levels were (dry matter basis): control (without okara) and 200, 300, 400, and 500 g kg−1 okara, with four replicates per treatment. Control silage did not contain okara, but water was added to adjust the moisture content (400 g kg−1 as fed). Mixtures were ensiled in lab-scale silos and stored for 150 days. Compared with the control silage, okara inclusion linearly increased crude protein (from 89.1 to 251 g kg−1 DM), ether extract (from 39.6 to 136 g kg−1 DM), neutral detergent fiber (from 79.9 to 174 g kg−1 DM), acid detergent fiber (from 22.4 to 119 g kg−1 DM), and ash (from 12.2 to 32.4 g kg−1 DM), whereas decreased dry matter content and in vitro dry matter digestibility (from 830 to 730 g kg−1 DM). The use of okara linearly increased lactic acid concentration but also intensified secondary fermentation. On the other hand, aerobic stability of silages increased due to okara inclusion because of the higher amount of short-chain fatty acids, such as butyric and acetic acids, which accumulated during fermentation. Okara inclusion in corn grain silage must be conditioned to the dry matter content at ensiling, but must not exceed 200 g kg−1 on dry matter basis.info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessSociedade Brasileira de ZootecniaRevista Brasileira de Zootecnia v.49 20202020-01-01info:eu-repo/semantics/articletext/htmlhttp://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1516-35982020000100500en10.37496/rbz4920190184 |
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Tres,Tamara Tais Bueno,Antonio Vinicius Iank Jobim,Clóves Cabreira Daniel,João Luiz Pratti Gritti,Viviane Carnaval |
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Tres,Tamara Tais Bueno,Antonio Vinicius Iank Jobim,Clóves Cabreira Daniel,João Luiz Pratti Gritti,Viviane Carnaval Effect of okara levels on corn grain silage |
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Tres,Tamara Tais Bueno,Antonio Vinicius Iank Jobim,Clóves Cabreira Daniel,João Luiz Pratti Gritti,Viviane Carnaval |
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Tres,Tamara Tais |
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Effect of okara levels on corn grain silage |
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Effect of okara levels on corn grain silage |
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Effect of okara levels on corn grain silage |
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Effect of okara levels on corn grain silage |
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Effect of okara levels on corn grain silage |
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effect of okara levels on corn grain silage |
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ABSTRACT We ensiled different levels of okara and ground corn to evaluate the effects on the fermentative pattern, aerobic stability, and chemical composition of resulting silages. The experimental design was completely randomized with four replicates per treatment. The okara levels were (dry matter basis): control (without okara) and 200, 300, 400, and 500 g kg−1 okara, with four replicates per treatment. Control silage did not contain okara, but water was added to adjust the moisture content (400 g kg−1 as fed). Mixtures were ensiled in lab-scale silos and stored for 150 days. Compared with the control silage, okara inclusion linearly increased crude protein (from 89.1 to 251 g kg−1 DM), ether extract (from 39.6 to 136 g kg−1 DM), neutral detergent fiber (from 79.9 to 174 g kg−1 DM), acid detergent fiber (from 22.4 to 119 g kg−1 DM), and ash (from 12.2 to 32.4 g kg−1 DM), whereas decreased dry matter content and in vitro dry matter digestibility (from 830 to 730 g kg−1 DM). The use of okara linearly increased lactic acid concentration but also intensified secondary fermentation. On the other hand, aerobic stability of silages increased due to okara inclusion because of the higher amount of short-chain fatty acids, such as butyric and acetic acids, which accumulated during fermentation. Okara inclusion in corn grain silage must be conditioned to the dry matter content at ensiling, but must not exceed 200 g kg−1 on dry matter basis. |
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Sociedade Brasileira de Zootecnia |
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2020 |
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http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1516-35982020000100500 |
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AT trestamaratais effectofokaralevelsoncorngrainsilage AT buenoantonioviniciusiank effectofokaralevelsoncorngrainsilage AT jobimclovescabreira effectofokaralevelsoncorngrainsilage AT danieljoaoluizpratti effectofokaralevelsoncorngrainsilage AT grittivivianecarnaval effectofokaralevelsoncorngrainsilage |
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