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Forage Diversity and Goats Jodie Pennington, [email protected], Region Small Ruminant Educator, Lincoln University, Newton County Extension Center, Neosho, MO—417-455-9500 Goats Eat Lots of Things • Select good parts of plant • Can tend to balance diet • Adapt to cospecies grazing • Like diversity of vegetation • Keep it simple • Browse with conventional OK Can be a problem Flowers, garden Weeds Poisonous plants Used to clear land Kikos adapt well to diversity Need fiber No One System Fits All • Need TDN, CP, Fiber, Minerals • Greatest concern is consistency of forages and availability of enough to eat • Watch bad plants • Want at least 4 inches tall if possible • Browse essential • Need good variety (buffet) Plan for Year-Round Conventional Foragesas much as possible-January??++Browse Nutrient Requirements CP TDN • • • • • • • Buck 10 % 60 % Dry doe 9 55 Late gestation 11 60 Lactating doe 11 60 Weaned kid 14 68 Yearling 12 65 Higher demand—greater requirements Browse may or may not meet needs Browse plants: % CP % TDN % Ca %P Acorns, fresh fruit 4.8 47 n/a n/a Honeysuckle buds & leaves 16.0 72 n/a n/a Honeysuckle leaves, late 10.0 69 n/a n/a Hackberry, mature 14.0 41 4.00 .13 Oak, shin, early 17.4 72 n/a .31 Oak, shin, late 7.5 n/a n/a n/a Sagebrush, sand, early 12.2 66 n/a n/a Sagebrush, sand, mature 7.2 60 .48 .12 Sumac, early veg. 13.7 77 n/a .20 Feeding Preferences Forb Goats Sheep Forbs Browse Cattle Grass Grass Goats & sheep can decrease weeds Yearly Forage Production++Browse 100 days 100 days 100 days 65 days Hay Spring Summer Fall Winter Hay Browse and Forbs as Pasture • Goats are browsers • Best to have some access to browse and/or forbs to supplement high quality, conventional forages • Increase performance Browse and forbs—need more mineral supplementation varies?? • • • • • • Oak Greenbrier Honeysuckle Persimmon Mimosa Others • Pigweed,other weeds • Kudzu • Sericea lespedeza • Peas, soybeans • Alfalfa, clover • Others Feed Prices Grain Commodities Hay?? Save money with forages!!!! PLANT TYPE TDN % CRUDE PROTEIN % Fescue hay 48-53 7-9 Bermuda hay 47-50 7-9 Alfalfa hay 50-63 13-20 Honeysuckle, leaves and buds 70+ 16+ Honeysuckle, mature 68+ 10+ Sumac, early vegetative 77 14 Oak, buds and young leaves 64 18 Persimmon leaves 54 12 Hackberry, mature 40 14 Kudzu, early hay 55 14 Juniper, leaves 64 6 Acorns, fresh 47 5 Curled dock 74 13 Mimosa, leaves 72 21 Mulberry, leaves 72 17 Grazing Systems for Sheep/Goats • Continuous—most popular ---Individual species, i.e. sheep or goats ---Multi-species grazing, i.e. goats with cattle, etc • Management Intensive Grazing-atypical ---Individual species, i.e. sheep or goats ---Multi-species grazing, i.e. goats with cattle, etc Benefits of Multispecies Grazing • Increased utilization of forages (??maybe 10-20%) --Greater total lbs per acre • Weed control --Goats eat weeds, can clean up pasture (2-3 yrs) • Reduced parasite loads --Goats graze higher • Diversified production --Goats and cattle --Cattle and sheep --Goats and horses --Start at 1 goat per cow and can go to 3 goats per cow-vary Complications with Multi-species Grazing—fencing and predators • Sheep need a lower copper mineral than cattle or goats • Additional fencing is needed—goats more fencing than sheep Exterior Interior Problems—food and feeding dogs Animal Unit Equivalents Kind/Class AUE Intake/day Air dry lbs. Intake/year Air dry lbs. Cow with calf 1.00 30 10,950 Bull, mature 1.35 40.5 14,782.5 Horse, mature 1.25 37.5 13,687.5 Sheep, mature 0.20 6.0 2190 Goat, mature 0.15 4.5 1642.5 What Stocking Rates of Cattle and Goats? Pasture Type % Brush Canopy Cows Goats Cows + Goats Excellent Pasture < 10% 1 6 to 8 1 + (1 to 2) Brushy Pasture 10 - 40% 1 9 to 11 1 + (2 to 4) Brush Eradication > 40% 8 to 12 .5 + (6 to 8 per acre) Sustainable Browse Management Maintaining 10 to < 40% 1 to 3 per acre .25 + (1 to 2 per acre) Sheep/Goats Require Good Feed • Browse/brush—young shoots, leaves • Forbes—weeds, bushy plants • Prefer plants in the vegetative stage of growth where nutrients are lower in fiber and higher in energy and protein • Goats need more fiber than just “grass” and grow 10-15% better if browse is available compared to grass only • Goats are better at selecting “good” parts of plant than sheep (and cattle and horses) Forage Availability Can Be A Concern % Grass growth 30 25 Warm-season forages 20 Stockpiled w.s.g. 15 10 5 Stockpiled fescue Winter annuals Cool-season forages Spring Spring Summer Summer Fall 0 Jan. Feb Mar. Apr. May Jun. Jul. Aug.Sep. Oct. Nov. Dec. Prior to drought in pastures Rest pastures 1. Maintain good soil fertility 2. Practice effective weed control with goats 3. Practice improved grazing management—not too heavy, come Always Maintain Pasture Production Inventory-Know When Need More Pasture ID Spring Summer Fall Winter Bermuda/mixed Poor Good Poor None Bermuda/fescue Fair Good Fair None Fescue/mixed Fair Fair Poor None -/+ + - -- Identify the forage type and average productivity for each pasture and add them up. Doing so will tell you where the “holes” are in the production system and where you need to make improvements. Nutrient Needs: Cattle>Sheep>Goats Goats are selective browsers, eat best parts Possible Forage/Grazing Systems for Small Ruminants • Must provide nutrients for mature herd • Must plan for adequate quantity and quality • Can decrease feed costs (from 60% to 40% of total costs), decrease grain costs • Vary with goals of farm • Usually continuous (most popular) and simple but can be management intensive grazing (MIG), especially with hair sheep • Can utilize weeds/brush with especially goats • Assist with parasite management Goats Can Grow & Control Brush Control Sheep and goats can change conventional pastures also, economical weed control Cattle Only Cattle and Hair Sheep Adequate Nutrients are Needed for Growth Of Sheep/Goats • Goats work better than sheep on brush • Both sheep and goats eat weeds • Studies show that goats do better with grass & browse than with grass only • Goats are better selective grazers on plants; sheep are better than cattle • NOTE: Cannot starve profit More Quantity of Feed=More ADG Goats do well on browse but will do better with more balanced diet--????may not be competitive in the feedlot???? Cannot starve profit from goats To Control Brush and Weeds • • • • Graze them early Defoliate every 6 weeks or less Defoliate in the fall Ask---What are we going to graze after the brush and weeds are gone? To Manage Brush as a Renewable Resource 1) Get on it later in the spring, 2) Long rotation > 8 wks rest, and 3) Do not defoliate late in the fall Can Use Conventional Grazing Systems (grasses/legumes) • Forages can decrease feed costs compared to grain • Vary with goals of farm, better with sheep • Needs less equipment than stored feeds • Must plan for adequate quantity and quality of forages • More competition with cattle with grass than with brush **Aid in Internal Parasite Control** Plants with Condensed Tannins (potent antioxidants--dewormers) • • • • • Sericea Lespedeza Annual lespedeza Birdsfoot trefoil Arrowleaf clover Berseem clover (white, not hardy) • Crown vetch • Chicory • • • • • • • Oak leaves/acorns Walnut leaves Mulberry Mimosa Acacia (thorn tree) Autumn olive Multiflora-rose Plan to Use Forages You Have • Soil test and fertilize & lime accordingly • Plan for different seasons, plan for a drought, consider over-seeding with legumes • Have browse available (accessible) • Rotate pastures to keep forages in vegetative stage of growth • Cut excess forage for hay as a reserve for winter or a drought • Monitor body condition score and supplement as needed Watch Feed Inventory Concerns— • Quantity—not enough forage (need forages or fiber if drought or overstocked) • Quality—must consider if energy, protein, fiber, or minerals change • Use what you have or buy what you need The Yield - Quality Compromise Availability Protein/energy Fiber/lignin Optimum grazing Conventional Forage Production++Browse 100 days 100 days 100 days 65 days Hay Spring Summer Fall Winter Hay Browse and forbes—use what you have or what your neighbor has and will give to you • Oak • Pigweed,other • Greenbrier weeds • Honeysuckle • Kudzu • Persimmon • Sericea lespedeza • Mimosa • Others • Others All farms differ for forage diversity for goats • • • • Fescue + woods Bermuda + woods Fescue/clover + woods Brush land + clover or lespedeza • Fescue/clover + weeds • Mixed grasses/clover + honeysuckle (others) • Maintenance diet can be brush and weeds • Conventional forages are more reliable • Brush and undergrowth are usually a waste product and can be 20-30% of the diet • Fresh undergrowth can be almost all of the diet for growing goats Summary for Conventional Grazing-Plan for fluctuating forage supply— --Vary forages to ensure supply-• • • • • • • Browse/forbs=almost essential with grass Fescue, orchard grass with legumes Lespedeza Native grasses, annual grasses Fescue/lespedeza Clovers/supplemental legumes Good hay from excess pasture and use if drought/snow/trees for goats Questions?? Goats & Sheep Require Good & Timely Management--Prevention & Planning Is Always The Key