Conference:Cattlemen's Day, 1996, Kansas State University, Manhattan, KS, March 1, 1996 Starting Page:72, Ending Page:77 Publisher:Kansas State University. Agricultural Experiment Station and Cooperative Extension Service
The efficacy of 13 commercial bacterial
silage inoculants was evaluated on 3rd and 4th
cutting alfalfa. All inoculants supplied at least
100,000 colony-forming units (cfu) of lactic
acid bacteria (LAB) per gram of ensiled crop,
and each inoculant increased the rate and
efficiency of the ensiling process. Inoculated
alfalfa silages had lower pH values; higher lactic
acid contents; and lower acetic acid, ethanol,
and ammonia-nitrogen contents than control
(untreated) silages. The addition of dextrose
(fermentable substrate) in combination with a
bacterial inoculant improved the quality of the
fermentation phase in both cuttings of alfalfa.