会议专题

Growth rate responses to magnesium or sodium supplements in lambs grazing dual-purpose wheats

Lambs grazed vegetative wheat crops in south-east Australia with and without Mg or Na supplements. Relative to the requirements for lamb growth, wheat forage was marginal for Mg, adequate for Ca, excessive for K and very low in Na. In Experiment 1, a combined Mg/Ca/Na supplement led to a 54% increase in lamb liveweight gain compared with unsupplemented lambs. Further experiments were then conducted to separate the responses to Mg or Na. In Experiment 2, Mg or Na supplements increased liveweight gain by 24 and 37%, respectively. In Experiment 3, Mg intake by lambs was increased by fertilizing the wheat crop with MgSO4. This increased wheat forage Mg from below (0.10% DM) to above (0.17% DM) that required by lambs and resulted in 24% faster liveweight gain at a stocking rate of 18/ha. At higher stocking rates (33, 47 sheep/ha), the response to Mg declined as herbage supply became increasingly limited. In the final experiment, Na-supplemented lambs grew 25% faster than unsupplemented lambs. The observed responses to Mg and Na may be separate responses, but diets low in Na and high in K have been shown to impair ruminal Mg absorption. The wheat forage in Experiments 1-4 contained 3-4% of DM as K and very low Na concentrations. We present evidence suggesting that the response to Na could partly be due to improved Mg absorption, arising from a reduction in dietary K:Na ratio.

winter wheat potassium sodium calcium magnesium liveweight gains sheep

H.Dove G.McMullen W.M.Kelman

CSIRO Plant Industry GPO Box 1600, Canberra, ACT 2601, Australia Agricultural Research Institute, New South Wales Department of Primary Industries Pine Gully Rd, Wag

国际会议

The 7tb International Symposium on the Nutrition of Herbivores(ISNH-7)(第七届国际草食动物营养研讨会)

北京

英文

965-970

2007-09-16(万方平台首次上网日期,不代表论文的发表时间)