Crude protein and RDP requirements are often stated, rarely is an RUP or MCP requirement discussed. Instead, it will be represented as a metabolizable protein (MP) requirement. Metabolizable protein is the combination of RUP and MCP, or protein broken down post-ruminally. This differentiation is sometimes explained as the needs of the microbes (RDP) and the needs of the animal (RUP + MCP=MP). Metabolizable protein is essential to all ruminants but plays a critical role in immature animals for growth, development, and achieving desired gain.
For example, a 1,300 lb cow in mid-gestation can maintain on a diet that provides 7.1% CP daily. This is her lowest CP requirement in the production cycle and should include both RDP and MP. If she is consuming a forage-based diet adequate in protein and total digestible nutrients (TDN), a mature cow can turn over her rumen microbe population at a rate that meets her MP requirement. In contrast, a 1,000 lb replacement heifer mid-gestation lacks the rumen capacity to produce enough MCP to meet her required MP justifying supplementation of RUP. This is not unlike formulating diets for classes of growing calves.
In recent history, distiller’s products have provided an economical RUP supplement to growing cattle. With changes in price and supply, evaluating other feeds is warranted, depending on supplement goals. The table below lists protein sources and their composition of RDP and RUP. Pricing feeds based on nutrient content (i.e., $/lb of RUP) is the best economical way to compare feedstuffs relative to the feeding goals. If selecting a feedstuff lower in CP or RUP than what is normally used, expect animal performance to reflect that decreased nutrient content. However, the lower CP or RUP feedstuff can make economic sense within resource and management constraints.
Feedstuff | Crude Protein, % | RDP, % of CP | RUP, % of CP |
Alfalfa Cubes | 18.08 | 68.82 | 31.01 |
Dried Distillers Grain | 30.79 | 32.00 | 67.93 |
Dry Corn Gluten Feed | 22.64 | 63.69 | 37.10 |
Cottonseed Meal | 44.98 | 57.19 | 42.70 |
Field Peas | 25.17 | 80.00 | 20.00 |
Whole Soybeans | 39.97 | 70.99 | 29.01 |
Source : unl.edu