Abstract:
In Trial 1, 336 yearling steers (755 lb)
were fed diets containing milo flaked to 22 (L),
25 (M), or 28 (H) lb/bu. The steers fed L consumed
3.2% less dry matter than cattle fed H
(P<.05) and had 6.9% lower gains (P<.05).
Feed efficiency tended (P=.15) to favor cattle
fed H. The H milo was flaked 27% faster than
M and 67% faster than L (P<.0001), resulting
in lower production cost for the heavy flakes.
In Trial 2, six ruminally cannulated steers were
fed the same diets used in Trial 1 in a replicated
3×3 Latin square. After adaptation to
the respective diets, the cattle were fasted and
then overfed to simulate a drastic intake fluctuation.
The L diet was fermented more
rapidly than the H diet, resulting in greater
ruminal pH depression (P<.10) following
overconsumption. Under the conditions of this
experiment, flaking milo more intensively than
28 lb/bu (58.7% starch gelatinization) resulted
in decreased consumption, lower mill efficiency,
and increased propensity for acidosis in
finishing steers.