When there is excessive mud cows reduce intake, which results in more wasted feed, particularly of forage. To improve their energy balance, there is a need to offer a feed of higher digestibility. According to research 4-8 inches of mud, reduces intake by 15 percent when compared to drier ground. If mud increases by an additional 50 percent, feed intake drop doubles (30%). For cow-calf pairs early in the calving season, the negative effect on intake affects the cows more, since claves are eating very little forage at the time. The performance of young calves’ can also suffer at this stage, since they still rely heavily on the cow’s milk as the main source of nutrients and this one drops as a result of less feed intake.
One approach to improve intake is to reduce the distance the cows travel to the feeding area. Similarly, access to relatively close, clean water improves intake. Providing access to fresh trace mineral supplements also enhances feed digestion and intake. When left on the ground, rain, snow, and pooled water washout white salt and essential minerals from mineral blocks and reduces their acceptability by cattle.
Supplemental forages for beef cows are usually high in fiber and as a result low in energy and borderline to low in protein. Examples of such are mature grass hay, ditch hay, cereal grain straws, and corn stalks. In addition, even if an analysis of the roughage in question contains borderline adequate percentages of crude protein (i.e. 10 %) and energy as TDN (i.e. 58%), remember cows do not eat “percentages” but “pounds” of nutrients. A 1,200-pound lactating beef cow needs 3 pounds of protein and 17.6 pounds of TDN. Under good environmental conditions, she can eat 2.5 percent of her body weight as dry feed or 30 pounds. If the diet contains 10 percent protein and 58 percent TDN, the cow eats 3 pounds of protein and 17.4 pounds of TDN, almost exactly what she needs.
Today’s commercial beef cows can produce around 20-25 pounds of milk daily at peak lactation, with high concentration of protein and fat. Her intake under 8” of mud can decrease by 15 percent which, in this example, will be around 26 pounds of dry feed, 2.6 pounds of protein, and 15 pounds of TDN. If we do not fulfill the greater protein and energy needs of early lactation, forage fermentation drops and as a result so does energy uptake, delaying the return to normal breeding cycles. Cows fed these forages will greatly benefit from high protein cubes or tubs. There are several offered in the market some with minimums of 20, 32, and 38-40 percent protein. In this example with 8” of mud, since the cow diet is deficient in 0.4 pounds of protein (3 – 2.6 = 0.4), it would be enough to offer 1.5 pounds of a 32 percent cube per head daily (0.48 pounds of protein supplemented). This supplementation will encourage the cow to eat more forage, better digest the fiber, increasing the TDN of the overall diet.
Muddy conditions do not just mean dirty looking beef cows. If not adequately, supplemented nutrient uptake will not meet the requirements of the cow in early lactation. Under these conditions, not only calf growth but also rebreeding are negatively impaired affecting the farm bottom line.
Source: sdsu.edu