Des Moines, Iowa
May 15, 2008
Windrow spacing, using
conditioners help offset potential losses
With rising hay prices, growers look to management practices to
achieve a high-quality crop.
Pioneer Hi-Bred, a DuPont business, suggests growers refine
alfalfa curing practices to maintain integrity of harvested hay.
Rapid, uniform curing of alfalfa is most desirable. However,
recent research reveals forages don't dry at a uniform rate.
Proper cutting and management practices can help offset curing
time and potential quality losses.
"Growers may think when alfalfa has been cut, it's dead," says
Dr. Bill Mahanna, coordinator of global nutritional sciences for
Pioneer. "Those cells continue to live. They're living,
functioning and metabolizing in the windrow until the plant
reaches about 48 percent moisture."
"There are three main reasons for quality loss," Mahanna
continues, "respiration losses in the field, leaf shatter from
harvesting equipment and the worst - leaching due to any kind of
rain. "
Through proper curing practices, losses can be minimized.
Alfalfa curing has three phases. The initial and intermediate
phases occur rapidly. The final phase takes progressively more
time.
"There is a misconception that leaves dry primarily through the
surface, but the surface is covered with a waxy cutin layer for
protection," says Mahanna. "The drying process actually occurs
through stomates - where the moisture escapes."
Stomates are openings in the leaves, small holes that act like
lungs. Oxygen and moisture exit the alfalfa plant through these
holes. Stomates open during the day and close at night.
"In order to keep stomates open and functioning properly,
growers need to look at their windrows. If a windrow is narrow
and shaded, the stomates will close," says Mahanna. "In return,
you won't achieve the initial phase of rapid drying."
Spreading out a windrow creates more surface area for exposure
to the sun and wind, allowing stomates to open and facilitate
the removal of moisture through the leaves.
"By understanding what those openings do - act like lungs -
growers can aid the drying process through good windrow
management. This allows moisture to escape and the crop to move
into the intermediate phase of drying," says Mahanna. "At that
moisture level, it is safe to silo the hay at harvest."
Another option for growers is conditioners. A conditioner on a
harvester along with a wide windrow is most beneficial when a
grower is planning to bale alfalfa for dry hay.
"If growers want dry hay, that's where conditioners are most
beneficial. We still can have the wide windrow, but it helps
considerably to utilize a conditioner, so when the stem is
crushed there is radial movement of moisture from it," says
Mahanna.
For additional nutritional and forage information, visit
www.pioneer.com/growingpoint and click on livestock nutrition.
Additionally, a biweekly forage informational podcast produced
by Pioneer experts is available at
www.worlddairydiary.com.
Pioneer Hi-Bred, a DuPont business, is the world's leading
source of customized solutions for farmers, livestock producers
and grain and oilseed processors. With headquarters in Des
Moines, Iowa, Pioneer provides access to advanced plant genetics
in nearly 70 countries.
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in 1802, DuPont puts science to work by creating sustainable
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