Selective Grazing Induced by Animal Excreta. II. Investigation of a Causal Theory
Open Access
- 1 August 1964
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Dairy Science Association in Journal of Dairy Science
- Vol. 47 (8) , 871-874
- https://doi.org/10.3168/jds.s0022-0302(64)88792-0
Abstract
Two studies are reported which investigated the validity of the theory of Plice (J. Range Mgmt. 5: 69. 1952) that decreased sugar in forages heavily fertilized with dung or N fertilizers (due to a P/N imbalance) causes the forage to become unpalatable to cattle. The 1st study revealed that heavy applications of P would not overcome unpalatability of dung-affected brome and that heavy applications of N as ammonium nitrate would not cause brome to become unpalatable, both situations contradictory to the proposed theory. The 2nd study confirmed the earlier results which showed the failure of N fertilizers (ammonium nitrate and urea sources) to render brome unpalatable. Similar increases in P in brome heavily fertilized with N or sheep manure accompanied increased crude protein with these treatments and dispelled the idea that a P/N imbalance occurs in plants fertilized in this manner. While a lowering of ethanol-soluble sugar did occur in brome receiving these additives (as predicted in Plice''s theory), the fact that the N applications did not render brome unpalatable, while sheep manure did, completely refuted the claim that lowered sugar concentration in the plant is responsible for the unpalatability of dung-affected forage. The unpalatability of brome growing on plots treated with a dilute mixture of cattle feces, urine and water (when no significant change in crude protein, P, or sugar occurred in the forage) further indicated that Plice''s theory is invalid.This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
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