The effects of supplementation frequency and amount of urea in dry supplements on intake and digestibility of low-quality tallgrass-prairie forage by beef steers
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The effects of supplementation frequency and amount of urea in dry supplements on intake and digestibility of low-quality tallgrass-prairie forage by beef steers
Conference:Cattlemen's Day, 1997, Kansas State University, Manhattan, KS, March 7, 1997 Starting Page:65, Ending Page:66 Publisher:Kansas State University. Agricultural Experiment Station and Cooperative Extension Service
Sixteen ruminally fistulated steers were used
to evaluate the effects of altering supplementation frequency and including urea in
dry supplements on forage intake and digestion.
Intake of low-quality tallgrass-prairie hay was
not affected by supplementation frequency or by
the inclusion of urea. Supplementing cattle less
frequently resulted in a decrease in diet
digestion. However, we observed a slight trend
for reduced supplementation frequency to exert
a greater impact when cattle were fed
supplements that contained urea.