Crop Residues for Sustainable Livestock Production
Mahesh MS
*
and Madhu Mohini
Dairy Cattle Nutrition Division, National Dairy Research Institute [Deemed University], Karnal, Haryana-132001, India
*
Corresponding author: Mahesh MS, Dairy Cattle Nutrition Division, National Dairy Research Institute [Deemed University], Karnal, Haryana-132001, India, Tel:
+911842259088; E-mail: drmaheshmsvet@gmail.com
Rec date: May 12, 2014, Acc date: May 31, 2014, Pub date: June 02, 2014
Copyright: © 2014 Mahesh MS, et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits
unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
Abstract
Global livestock production is constrained by the inadequate supply
of feeds and forages for optimum production. At the same time land
devoted for forage production does not likely to increase in the near
future due to urbanization, industrialization etc. In this respect,
abundantly available crop residues possess immense potential as
ruminant feed resource, whose prospects are outlined briefly in this
paper.
Keywords: Crop residues; Digestibility; Feeding; Straw
Description
Global demand for animal derived foods [milk, meat and eggs] is
increasing tremendously in the recent years and will continue to
increase in the near future. More so in the Asia, where the demand for
livestock products are anticipated to outstrip the current production
levels, and the demands are projected to grow by two to three folds by
2050 [1]. To achieve these targeted levels of production, efficient
feeding of livestock is necessary as feed is the major driver of livestock
production accounting for more than 0.65 of recurring expenditure.
Furthermore, prices of conventional feed ingredients as well as grains
are constantly escalating globally. In this context, crop residues,
comprising mainly of straw (from fine grains such as wheat, oat, rice
etc.) and stover (from coarse grains such as maize, sorghum, millets
etc.) obtained aſter harvesting the crops, form an abundantly available
feedstock (~4 billion metric tons globally) for ruminant feeding. For
example, in India annual availability is >100 million metric tons each
of rice straw, wheat straw and sugarcane bagasse, which are otherwise
unfit for human consumption. Despite the fact that cereal crop
residues are of low feeding value [i.e., poorly available nitrogen, low
digestibility with lack of useful minerals] and have low voluntary
intakes [around 1.5-2 kg/100 kg mature body weight], they constitute
and continue to be an important feed resource for sustainable dairy
production in the developing world, as energy-protein malnutrition
among livestock is a serious problem in these countries [2-4].
Crop residues are used as ruminant feed since millennia [2]. Straws
of legume crops have generally better nutritive value, forage quality
and thus are nutritionally superior to cereal straws. Stovers have better
nutritional quality than straws with respect to intake and organic
matter digestibility [>50% vs. <50%] [5]. Straws and stovers are
generally used to feed low producing animals or can be used as a
source of bulk in the high producers’ ration to fulfill their appetite, can
help correct physically effective fibre shortage for milk fat synthesis in
high concentrate feeding systems and may beneficially provide
additional heat increment during cold stress conditions [5].
Major constraint to utilize the straws by ruminants is the
interlocking of cell wall polysaccharides with the resistant biopolymer
lignin [up to 15%], which prevents their microbial biodegradation in
the rumen [6] and thereby decreasing the overall nutritive worth for
ruminants. In addition, rice straw is unique in that it has very high
content of silica [13-15%]. Several physical, chemical, physico-
chemical and biological methods have been tried to maximize the
utilization of energy from these straws, as better quality straw can
result in at least 10% increase in productivity [7]. Among the many
methods, chopping [2-3 cm], soaking in water before feeding, alkali
treatment in industrial systems and urea ammoniation [4% urea at
40% moisture level for 1-2 weeks] in the tropics have been tried
extensively by both researchers as well as farmers with the latter being
enriching the nitrogen level of straw. A noteworthy finding here is that
a growing calf may lose body weight of 150 g per day if fed straw alone;
while similar calf fed urea treated straw alone can gain about 150 g per
day [5]. Biological treatments (e.g., Karnal process) aiming at the
deconstruction of lignocelluloses employ selective ligninolytic white-
rot basidiomycetes under solid-state fermentation. Although
improvements in digestibility and nitrogen level have been evident,
inherent organic matter losses (up to 40%) can’t be eliminated and the
technology is not economical [6]. Another approach is
supplementation of critical nutrients [catalytic] like in the form of urea
molasses mineral blocks [8], slowly degradable proteins [moderate]
and green forage supplementation (substitutional) to improve the
performance [2]. Catalytic and moderate supplementations can also be
done by use of ‘protein banks’ through tree leaves at the farm level [2].
A considerable variation in the quality of straws in terms of
digestibility as well as metabolizable energy exists among different
cultivars of rice, wheat, barley and stovers of sorghum, pearl millet as
well as groundnut haulms [9,10]. Cultivar with superior stover quality
without affecting grain yield [i.e., general ratio of straw: grain is 1:1 to
1:3] must be popularized under ‘food-feed crops research’, which have
the additional advantage of lowering methane emission by ruminant
enteric fermentation [2] similar to catalytic supplements [5].
Management of crop residues linked with burning of straws is a real
‘burning issue’ in country like India, although this has been banned in
the UK in the 1980s [2,7]. Annually >20 million tons of straw biomass
is being burnt in the field due to various reasons which is causing
serious environmental pollution via carbon dioxide, smoke, methane
etc. and human health hazards, besides diminishing soil organic matter
content and fertility. It is advisable to feed straw rather than burning it
at least from the point of methane emission, which is much higher in
the former than through enteric fermentation. Alternatively, these can
be processed by compressing into densified feed blocks’ for future
usage [7].
In summary, as the land devoted for green forage production is not
expected to expand beyond its present level (i.e., 4% in India), and the
crop residues are produced without additional allocation of land and
water [11], there is an urgent need for the efficient utilization of
Advances in Dairy Research
Mahesh and Mohini, J Adv Dairy Res 2014, 2:2
http://dx.doi.org/10.4172/2329-888X.1000e108
Editorial Open Access
J Adv Dairy Res
ISSN:2329-888X ADR, an open access journal
Volume 2 • Issue 2 • 1000e108