Abstract:
Four ruminally cannulated crossbred steers
(882 lb) were used to investigate the effects of
temporarily altering the levels of alfalfa in a
high-concentrate diet on ruminal characteristics
during a bout of experimentally induced subacute
acidosis. A diet based on dry rolled corn
with 8% alfalfa hay was fed before and after a
2-day challenge phase when steers were forced
to consume 2.5% of their body weight in 90
minutes each day after a prior 24-hour fast.
During the challenge phase, steers were fed
diets containing 5, 8, 11, or 14% alfalfa. Feed
intake quickly recovered for steers fed all but
the 5% alfalfa diet, with a tendency for a linear
(P<.11) decline in feed intake as alfalfa was
decreased in the challenge diet. The intensity
and duration of the pH drop were increased as
the level of alfalfa decreased. Mean pH decreased,
total VFA concentration increased, and
the ratio of acetate:propionate decreased linearly
(P<.06) as level of alfalfa decreased.
Because the ruminal parameters measured for
the 8% and 11% alfalfa diets were similar, the
data suggest that temporarily increasing the
basal diet to more than 11% alfalfa is necessary
to mitigate the effects of a forced disruption in
feed intake. Increasing the level of alfalfa hay
from 8 to 14% of diet dry matter increased fluid
dilution rate, lowered time that ruminal pH was
below 5.5, and resulted in higher mean ruminal
pH in steers with experimentally induced acidosis.