Abstract:
An inoculant (Sila-bac) and a non-protein nitrogen (LSA-100) silage
additive were evaluated with whole-plant, forage sorghum silage. Sila-bac
silage had the fastest temperature rise and peaked at 10 C above its initial
temperature. LSA-100 silage had a slow, steady temperature rise and reached
a maximum of 22 C above its initial. Control silage peaked at 15 C above
its initial. Steers fed LSA-100 silage gained 7 to 9% faster than did
those fed control or Sila-bac silages. LSA-100 silage was consumed in
greatest amount; Sila-bac silage, in the least. The two additives improved
feed efficiency by 3% over the control.
Both additives improved aerobic stability; control silage heated after
3 days; Sila-bac and LSA-100 after 7. Dry matter recovery from the stave
silos was similar for control (78.1%) and LSA-100 silages (77.3%), but
higher for Sila-bac silage (81.2%). When fermentation, storage, and
feedout losses were combined with steer performance, pounds of gain per
ton of ensiled forage were 88.8 for Sila-bac, 84.5 for LSA-100, and 82.6
for control silages.