2005 Beef Business Bulletin Stories Archive
USDA Can Measure the Nutrient Value in Your Pasture
Livestock producers soon may be able to tell almost immediately how much nutrition a calf is getting from the grass it’s grazing on — or even how much weight that calf will gain if it keeps eating that same grass.
USDA’s Agricultural Research Service (ARS) scientists have worked with something called spectral reflectance technology, which will allow them to measure the nutrients standing in the pasture. The Grazinglands Research Laboratory at El Reno, Okla., has established a cooperative research and development agreement with two private Oklahoma firms. They will design, manufacture and market a small, low-cost, hand-held optical remote sensor that can calculate, store and display data on forage’s nutrient quality.
According to ARS soil scientist Patrick Starks, the nutritional value of live, standing forages in pastures is essential knowledge for livestock producers. It allows them to make informed management decisions about stocking rates, beginning and ending dates for grazing, and the need for supplements.
Previously, Starks and ARS collaborators, including El Reno animal scientist William Phillips and Samuel Coleman in the Subtropical Agricultural Research Station at Brooksville, Fla., showed that spectral reflectance data can almost immediately show quality of forage grasses. The method’s accuracy is comparable to much slower conventional lab analysis.
The El Reno research also led to an interesting side study in which ARS animal scientist Michael Brown and Redlands Community College undergraduate student Amina Phillips found that spectral technology can help predict weight gains and growth of foraging animals.