For one research topic, in particular, results recently shared by MSU have left many within Michigan dairy over the past year to say, “Holy cow!”
Dr. Adam Lock, a professor in the Department of Animal Sciences and interim chair of the Department of Large Animal Clinical Sciences, has long focused his research on the role of dietary fatty acids in dairy cow performance and sustainability. Since 2021, he’s used funding from M-AAA, MMPA and the United Soybean Board to study if soybeans with high amounts of oleic acid could increase yields of milk fat and protein when fed to dairy cows a result that would increase production (and paychecks) for dairy farmers.
After years of data collection and analysis, not only did results support the theory that high oleic soybeans can increase milk production when fed to cows, but they also showed promise that dairy producers could decrease their feeding cost when planting the soybeans themselves so much so that Michigan seed suppliers ran out of the soybean seed last year due to demand, Dr. Lock said.
Additional studies have demonstrated how roasting the soybeans before feeding them can provide even greater benefits for milk production.
“High oleic soybeans offer a rare win-win: they improve milk components and reduce feed cost, while also supporting local crop production. That’s the kind of integrated impact we strive for in our research,” Dr. Lock said. “Continued support for applied research like this is essential. It’s how we turn promising ideas into real-world solutions for Michigan farmers.”
No one has seen the impacts these soybeans have had more than those feeding them to cows, growing them or providing consultation on and selling them.
As a former doctoral student in Dr. Lock’s Dairy Lipids Nutrition Program and Laboratory who focused her research on oleic acid, Dr. Alycia Bales now provides animal nutrition technical support for Caledonia Farmers Elevator, a farmer-owned co-op that specializes in feed, grain, livestock nutrition and crop production and management, among other specialties. Charlie Kunisch, another MSU alumnus, is a dairy and beef cattle specialist with Vita Plus, an employee-owned company offering the latest in livestock technology, nutrition and management information.
Both Dr. Bales and Kunisch work closely with Michigan producers to guide them through decisions influencing how they operate their farms, including what to feed livestock. Working with his farm’s nutritionist, Brian Preston, who today manages his family’s fourth-generation 1,000-cow dairy farm in Quincy, Michigan Preston Dairy connected with Drs. Lock and Bales in 2023 to learn more about the potential benefits of feeding cows high oleic soybeans. In hearing them present their research on a topic that until then had been minimally studied in Michigan, Preston and his family decided to grow and utilize the soybeans in their operation, and the results they’ve seen have excited them.
Hear from Dr. Bales, Kunisch and Preston in the Q&A below on how high oleic soybeans are galvanizing the dairy industry and how MSU research has played a role in their success.
Source : msu.edu