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Feeding Dried Distillers Grains to Hogs Ron Plain, University of Missouri.

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Presentation on theme: "Feeding Dried Distillers Grains to Hogs Ron Plain, University of Missouri."— Presentation transcript:

1 Feeding Dried Distillers Grains to Hogs Ron Plain, University of Missouri

2 Production of Ethanol and Dried Distiller Grains with Solubles  1 bushel of corn (56 lbs) will yield:  2.75 gallons of ethanol  17 lbs of DDGS A 45 mil gal/yr plant generates: ~ 400 tons of DDGS every day

3 Dry Milled Ethanol Production Corn Ethanol Stillage Thin Stillage Wet Distiller Grain Wet Distiller Grain with Solubles Condensed Distiller Solubles DDGS

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5 Wet Milled & Dry Milled Corn for Ethanol Source: PRX Blue Sky Forecast

6 DDGS Production in the U.S.  2000 – 4.3 billion pounds  2006 – 25.5 billion pounds  2010 – 42.5 billion pounds By comparison, U.S. hogs eat about 82 billion pounds of feed annually

7 Use of Dried Distiller Grains with Solubles  80% used in ruminant diets  10% exported  10% fed to non-ruminants

8 U.S. Ethanol Plants 5 bgy expanding to 8 bgy

9 Nutrient Composition (DM) ItemCornSBMDDGS Crude Protein, % 8-947-4929-33 Crude Fat, % 438-12 Crude Fiber, % 2-310-115-10 ADF, % 3.110.615-185 DE, kcal/lb 155117821589- 1836 Lysine, % 0.330.6-1.1 Phosphorus, % 0.30.70.4-1.0

10 Dried Distiller Grains with Solubles  Product variability – Nutrient Content  Crude protein  23 to 30 %  Amino acid digestibility  17.7 to 74.4 %  Lysine content  0.59 to 0.89 %  Crude fat  3 to 12 %

11 Why the variation in nutrient concentrations?  Nutrient variability of the corn  Processing methods  Type of yeast used  Fermenting and distillation efficiency  Drying temperature and time  Amount of solubles blended

12 DDGS Product Variability  Variability impacts on:  Nutritional value  Palatability (feed intake)  Indicators of quality  Color  Light golden to dark brown  Smell  Sweet to smoky or burnt

13 Dried Distiller Grains with Solubles Lower Quality Less Digestible High Quality Highly Digestible

14 DDGS Nutritional Issues  Micotoxins:  Any micotoxins (aflatoxin, vomatoxin, etc) in corn are concentrated by dry milling  Only purchase DDGS from ethanol plants which check corn for micotoxins before milling

15 DDGS Nutritional Issues  Amino Acids:  Imbalance of amino acids (lysine, cystine and threonine)  Reduced amino acid digestibility  Add synthetic lysine if DDGS >10% of diet  Add synthetic threonine and tryptophan if DDGS >20% of diet

16 DDGS Nutritional Issues  Minerals  Corn is 0.25% phosphorus which is 14% digestible by hogs  DDGS is 0.75% phosphorus which is 90% digestible  Add less dicalcium phosphate to hog diets containing DDGS  Less phosphorus in the manure

17 DDGS Nutritional Issues  High Fat Content (9-12%)  Negatively impacts pork fat  quality and belly firmness  Significant problem if DDGS>20% of diet

18 DDGS Impact on Pork Fat Belly Traits0%10%20%30% Thickness, cm 3.153.002.842.71 Firmness score 27.324.425.121.3 Adj firmness score 25.923.825.422.4 Iodine number 66.868.670.672.0 DDGS Content of Feed

19 DDGS Nutritional Issues  High Fiber Content  Valuable for ruminants  Low digestibility for hogs  Adds to volume of manure

20 DDGS Handling  Particle size  600 to 2,100 microns  Impacts  Flowability  Pelletability

21 Storing DDGS  Limited Storage  High in polyunsaturated fatty acids  Wet distillers  Summer – 7 days  Winter – 3 to 4 weeks  Dry distillers (> 85 % DM)  Summer – 1 month  Winter – 3 months

22 Dried Distiller Grains with Solubles  Health Considerations  Low soluble fiber diets may reduce the proliferation of pathogenic organisms in the GI tract (Hampson, 1999)  Illeitis or Lawsonia intracellularis  Hemorrhagic bowel syndrome  Fewer cases of:  Acidosis  Laminitis  Liver abscesses

23 Feeding DDGS to Sows  DDGS during gestation & lactation  Slightly improves next pregnancy’s  Feed intake  Litter size  Weaning weight

24 Substitution Rule for Swine Rations  Add 200 lb of DDGS + 3 lb limestone  To replace:  177 lbs of corn  20 lbs soybean meal (44%)  6 lbs of dicalcium phosphate

25 Hog Growth Performance (63-268 pounds) DDGS F/GADFIADGCar Wt 0%2.475.632.28208.86 10%2.515.592.23202.67 20% 30% 2.46 2.47 5.38 5.32 2.18 2.15 202.14 199.22 Source: University of Missouri feeding trials Some other trials show no negative impact on animal performance for low levels of DDGS in diet

26 Economic Value of DDGS for Hogs (0% reduction in ADG) Corn Price ($/bu) 150175200225 2.0089929497 2.50105108110113 3.00121123126128 3.50137139142144 Soybean Meal Price ($/ton) DDGS values ($/ton) for various prices of corn and soybean meal

27 Economic Value of DDGS for Hogs (2% reduction in ADG) Corn Price ($/bu) 150175200225 2.0083868991 2.50100102105107 3.00116118121123 3.50132134137139 Soybean Meal Price ($/ton) DDGS values ($/ton) for various prices of corn and soybean meal

28 Economic Value of DDGS for Hogs (4% reduction in ADG) Corn Price ($/bu) 150175200225 2.0078808385 2.50949699102 3.00110113115118 3.50126129132134 Soybean Meal Price ($/ton) DDGS values ($/ton) for various prices of corn and soybean meal

29 Recommended Inclusion Rates for DDGS in Swine Diets Phase Start pointMax Nursery (> 15 lbs) 5%25% Grow-finish10%20% Gestating sows20%50% Lactating sows 5%20% Boars20%50%

30 Limitations  Synthetic amino acids needed if DDGS >10% of ration  Quality of pork fat impaired if DDGS >20% of ration  Not recommended for pigs <15 lbs  Sows may need adaptation period to high levels of DDGS

31 Summary  DDGS can effectively be used in swine diets  DDGS can negatively impact feed intake  DDGS quality is highly variable  Producers should test samples or develop specification sheet with the plant to properly formulate the ration  200 lbs DDGS plus 3 lbs of limestone replaces 177 lbs corn, 20 lbs SBM and 6 lbs dical

32 Questions?

33 Acknowledgements This PowerPoint file was adapted by:  Ron Plain, Ag Economist, U of Missouri  From a PowerPoint file originally developed by Marcia Shannon, Animal Scientist, U of Missouri  Summarizing a lot of fine research, especially by Jerry Shurson, Animal Scientist, U of Minnesota A useful website: www.ddgs.umn.eduwww.ddgs.umn.edu


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