Feed
Analysis
Nutrients
100

Reasons to conduct feed analysis 

diet formulation to provide balanced diets

to provide analysis for use in estimating available nutrients

to provide information to solve a production problem that may be feed related

to place a market value on a feed

to verify a commercial guarantee

100

Importance of moisture or dm analysis

Feedstuffs are quite variable in moisture content

contributes to H2O req of animal

high moisture content has negative effects

Feed analysis results on DM basis

100

Ruminants can utilize NPN

urea as non-protein nitrogen contains 45% N, which is equivalent to ~281% CP

urea toxicity limits feeding

Limit to 2% of the diet

Urea unpalatable, so mix with molasses

200

Feed sampling is important for what?

Representative sampling from several locations

Minimize possibility of alterations in feed composition during storage

200

Methods of DM analysis

Oven drying

Moisture meter

Freeze drying

Near infrared reflectance spectroscopy

200

Ether extract or crude fat

Compounds found in ether extract

and problems 

Ground sample is extracted with diethyl ether for 4 hour using Soxhlet extractor 

ether soluble material = ether extract

compounds = triglycerides, free fatty acids, cholesterol, fat soluble vitamins, resins, waxes

problems = EE fraction assumed to have high E content, can overestimate the E content if EE has high % of waxes

300

What to do with a collected feed sample?

Grind to allow for thorough mixing of sample

preserve if needed

record sampling details

send at least 2 samples for analysis to take average

300

Ash determination

Ash content = mineral content

Only total amount of minerals is measured 

useful indicator of diet composition

300

Crude fiber

Issues with it

Feed components of low digestibility - cellulose, hemi cellulose and lignin

Issues = Not a chemically defined fraction, incomplete extraction of cellulose hemicellulose and lignin which then ends up in the nitrogen free extract, not highly repeatable

400

Proximate analysis

most common chemical analysis of feeds

Series of analytical procedures that partitions the feed into six fractions

400

alternative methods of ashing

Minerals such as iodine and selenium are volatile at 500-600 degrees Celsius - could understand mineral content

Wet ashing procedure - OM destroyed by boiling in concentrated perchloric acid

400

Advantages and disadvantages of proximate analysis

A = requires relatively inexpensive equipment, provides a good general evaluation of feedstuffs, TDN energy system is based on proximate analysis, most of the current nutritional data is based on proximate analysis

D =Does not define individual nutrients, some errors is basic assumptions, time-consuming, gives no indication of digestibility, partitions carbs poorly

500

The proximate fractions - what nutrients get analyzed

Moisture or DM

Ash

Crude protein

Ether extract or crude fat

Crude fiber

Nitrogen free extract

500

Determination of crude protein?

Limitations of it?

measures total N content of test feed and uses it to estimate the crude protein content

Assumption that all protein contains 16% N

Assumption that all N comes from protein

500

Alternative to crude fiber analysis 

Detergent extraction system developed by van soest at cornell university 

used primarily for forages 

Partitions the fiber component into soluble and insoluble carbohydrate