The effects of farm management practices and seasonal variation on the microbial community and chemical composition of corn and grass-legume silage are largely understudied due to the advantages of controlled mini-silo experiments. This study aims to investigate the effects that some key farm factors (use of an inoculant, farm region, and bunker or tower silo) and seasonal variations have on corn and grass-legume silage from farms across Ontario, Quebec, and New York. The silage was either treated with a commercial inoculant (Lallemand Biotal Buchneri 500® or Chr Hansen SiloSolve FC®) or left untreated. The bacterial communities of silage were compared to those of raw bulk tank milk from the same farm to determine if they were similarly affected by management practices or seasonal variations. Family level analysis of the 16S rRNA V3-V4 gene amplicon bacterial community, the ITS1 amplicon fungal community, NMR water soluble metabolome, and mycotoxin LC-MS were performed on silage over a two-year period. Chemical compounds associated with the use of inoculants in corn and grass-legume silage were higher in inoculated corn (acetate, propane-1,2-diol, γ-aminobutyrate; < 0.001) and grass-legume (propionate; = 0.011). However, there was no significant difference in the relative abundance (RA) of in either silage type. was higher in non-inoculated corn ( < 0.001) and grass-legume ( < 0.001) silage than in inoculated silage. Tower silos had higher RA of ( < 0.001) and higher pH ( < 0.001) in corn and grass-legume silage. The one farm that used liquid manure with no other fertilizer type had higher RA of ( = 0.045) and other rumen/fecal ( < 0.006) bacteria in grass-legume silage than all other farms. Seasonal variation affected most of the key silage microbial families, however the trends were rarely visible across both years. Few trends in microbial variation could be observed in both silage and bulk tank milk: two farms had higher ( < 0.001) in milk and either corn or grass-legume silage. In farms using an inoculant, lower was observed in the raw bulk tank milk.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2023.1214915 | DOI Listing |
Front Microbiol
November 2023
Département des Sciences des Aliments, Laboratoire de Génomique Microbienne, Université Laval, Québec, QC, Canada.
Introduction: The microbiota of bulk tank raw milk is known to be closely related to that of microbial niches of the on-farm environment. Preserved forage types are partof this ecosystem and previous studies have shown variations in their microbial ecology. However, little is known of the microbiota of forage ration combinations and the transfer rates of associated species to milk.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Environ Manage
December 2023
Embrapa Cerrados, BR 020, Km 18, CEP. 08223 - 73310 - 970, Planaltina, DF, Brazil.
The emission of nitrous oxide (NO), one of the main greenhouse gases, which contributes significantly to global warming, is a major challenge in modern agriculture. The effects of land use systems on NO emissions are the result of multiple variables, whose interactions need to be better understood. In this sense, this study analyzed the possible effects of different soil managements, crop rotations and sequences, as well as edaphoclimatic factors causing NO emissions from soils in the Cerrado biome (scrubland).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Microbiol
July 2023
Department of Food Science, Dairy at Guelph, Ontario Agricultural College, University of Guelph, Guelph, ON, Canada.
The effects of farm management practices and seasonal variation on the microbial community and chemical composition of corn and grass-legume silage are largely understudied due to the advantages of controlled mini-silo experiments. This study aims to investigate the effects that some key farm factors (use of an inoculant, farm region, and bunker or tower silo) and seasonal variations have on corn and grass-legume silage from farms across Ontario, Quebec, and New York. The silage was either treated with a commercial inoculant (Lallemand Biotal Buchneri 500® or Chr Hansen SiloSolve FC®) or left untreated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Anim Sci
November 2022
University of Wisconsin Marshfield Agricultural Research Station, Stratford, WI 54484, USA.
For baled silages, production of clostridial fermentation products can be exacerbated by exceeding normal moisture targets (45% to 55%), and/or by the application of dairy slurry before harvest. Our objectives were to test a microbial inoculant as a mitigant of clostridial products in high-moisture, grass-legume (52% ± 13.8% cool-season grasses, 44.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Dairy Sci
April 2020
Department of Animal Science, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Lincoln 68583. Electronic address:
Millions of feed composition records generated annually by testing laboratories are valuable assets that can be used to benefit the animal nutrition community. However, it is challenging to manage, handle, and process feed composition data that originate from multiple sources, lack standardized feed names, and contain outliers. Efficient methods that consolidate and screen such data are needed to develop feed composition databases with accurate means and standard deviations (SD).
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