Six abomasally cannulated Hereford steers (12 mo of age, 300 +/- 10 kg) grazing annual ryegrass (Lolium multiflorum Lam.) paddocks were used in a replicated 3 x 3 Latin square design to determine effects of ruminal escape protein (EP) supplementation on forage intake, fiber digestion, and protein flow to the intestine. Steers were fed one of three isoenergetic supplements: high ruminal escape protein (HEP), low ruminal escape protein (LEP), or corn, which supplied an estimated .25, .125, or 0 kg of EP/d in addition to EP supplied by corn. Fish meal (FM) and distiller's dried grains with solubles (DDGS) were sources of EP; FM provided 66.7% and DDGS provided 33.3% of estimated EP. Steers were adjusted to each supplement for 7 d before a 4-d collection period. Both total and forage DMI responded quadratically (P less than .03 and P less than .07, respectively) to EP supplementation. Total tract DM digestion tended (P less than .13) to increase linearly with EP supplementation. Abomasal total CP flow increased linearly (P less than .10) as supplemental EP increased. Crude protein flow in steers receiving HEP, LEP, and corn was 1,137, 1,027, and 844 g/d, respectively. Likewise, abomasal nonammonia N (NAN) tended to be greater (P less than .15, linear) for steers receiving HEP. Nonammonia N flows were 1,044, 955, and 771 g/d for steers receiving HEP, LEP, and corn, respectively. Abomasal ammonia flow did not differ (P less than .20) among treatments, nor did reticuloruminal fiber digestion (P less than .20). These data indicate that EP can increase postruminal protein flow and will not negatively affect fiber digestion in steers grazing annual ryegrass pastures.

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