A set of four silages, comprising unwilted and wilted silages,
both with and without bacterial
inoculation, was prepared from perennial ryegrass swards on each of eight
harvesting occasions
during the 1994 growing season. The four silages, within a single
harvest, were offered as the total diet
at the maintenance level of feeding to 16 wether sheep in an 8-period change-over
study with
experimental periods of 3 weeks duration, in order to determine
whole tract digestibility and urinary
excretion of purine derivatives (PD). Silage dry matter (DM) and
nitrogen (N) degradabilities were
also examined in the rumen of four rumen-fistulated steers offered a medium
quality silage and a
concentrate supplement at a ratio of 60[ratio ]40 (silage[ratio ]concentrate)
on a DM basis. The data presented
are the mean results obtained across the eight harvests.
There were no significant effects of inoculation on silage pH and
ammonia-N/total-N across the
unwilted and wilted materials. Inoculation of either the unwilted
or wilted silages had no significant
effect on microbial activity in the rumen of sheep, as indicated
from excretion of urinary PD, or on
silage DM or N degradability assessed with rumen-fistulated steers.
However, inoculation significantly
increased the digestibility of organic matter (1·7%, P<0·01),
N (4·6%, P<0·001), energy (2·3%,
P<0·01), neutral detergent fibre (1·5%, P<0·05)
and acid detergent fibre (2·8%, P<0·001) in the
silage. These increases in digestibility following inoculation, in
general derived equally from both the
unwilted and wilted silages. The results indicate that the increase
in silage nutrient digestibility
following inoculation probably reflects a more extensive digestion
in the abomasum and intestine, rather than in the rumen.
Wilting of grass prior to ensiling resulted in silages with significantly
lower pH (5·4%, P<0·05)
and ammonia-N/total-N (42·7%, P<0·001) across
the untreated and inoculant-treated materials.
Wilting also significantly increased (P<0·05) urinary
PD-N output of sheep by 6·9% and silage DM
degradability by steers by 1·6–2·4% across
the untreated and inoculant-treated silages. However,
there were no significant effects of wilting on silage N degradability
and
silage nutrient digestibility.