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Chris Richards Beef Cattle Extension Specialist Stillwater Natural Occurrence and Processing Widely distributed in nature Ores Gypsum, barite, epsom salts Mineral springs Occurs with: Coal, petroleum, natural gas Soils, water, plants and animals Sulfur in Nutrition Distributed widely throughout body and is found in all cells Bulk of body sulfur found in sulfur containing amino acids and proteins Represents ~ 0.15 - 0.25% total body weight Some sulfate recycled via saliva to rumen Excreted primarily in urine Sulfur-Containing Amino Acids Microbes of the ruminant can use inorganic sulfur to synthesize sulfur amino acids and vitamins Methionine Essential amino acid Cysteine Cystine Taurine Homocysteine Cystathionine Sulfur 0.15% = requirement 0.40% = toxicity Feed Sulfur Concentration Feed Average Range Alfalfa hay 0.28 0.21 – 0.54 Corn grain 0.13 0.11 – 0.17 WDG plus sol. 0.44 0.35 – 0.90 Condensed distillers solubles 0.40 1.00 – 2.23 Corn gluten feed 0.47 0.40 – 0.75 Soybean meal 0.46 0.35 – 0.60 Water Salts carbonate, bicarbonates, sulfates, nitrates, chlorides, phosphates, fluorides Impacts palatability Estimated Daily Water Intake of Cattle Gal/Day Water vs Feed Consumption Ex. 1,000 lb steer or 1400 pound lactating cow 1,000 ppm of contaminant 20 Gal water consumed 167 lb of water 75 g of contaminant or 2.7 oz contaminant Up to 6x impact of feed concentrations TDS for Cattle if S is potential Sulfate in Water Deficiencies in Ruminants Effect on rumen microbes Reduced digestibility of ration Sub-optimal utilization of non-protein nitrogen Decreased numbers of rumen microbes Depressed microbial protein synthesis S from Water on Performance S from Water on Performance Eructated H2S is inhaled allowing H2S to enter the brain causing necrosis of the grey matter. Polioencephalomalacia (PEM) in Cattle Known as “Star Gazers” or “Blind Staggers” Sulfur Toxicity Some relation to Thiamin deficiency Nervous system disorder Necrosis of cerebrocortical region of brain Interactions Excess sulfur increases the dietary Cu requirement for ruminants H2S + molybdenum thiomolybdates Thiomolybdates bind Cu Sulfide formation in the rumen also adversely affects Cu bioavailability by the formation of insoluble cupric sulfide Interactions Added sulfate increases the Se requirement Affects Se uptake by rumen microbes High S intake increases Se excretion S and Se form structural analogs Se can replace sulfur in methionine and cysteine (Se spares S) S has not been shown to replace Se for biological activity Copper Deficiency Loss of Hair Pigmentation Rough Hair – Enlarged Joints ABNORMAL JOINT THICKENING CLASSICAL COPPER Organic Trace Minerals Metal amino acid chelate Metal amino acid complex Metal polysaccharide complex Metal proteinate Hydroxy Minerals Summary S is important – required - toxic Can be feed based, but more common in complete diets Water has a large impact – increased summer risk Cattle can adapt to some level Induces PEM – S vs. Thiamin deficiency different Cu, Se, Mn Vit E and C