1. Introduction
In temperate climatic regions, such as North Western Europe, the basal diet of beef cattle fed indoors is predominantly grass silage [
1,
2]. As silage alone usually does not supply sufficient nutrients to sustain target growth rates to reach a commercially acceptable carcass, it is supplemented with concentrates [
1,
3]. Concentrates fed to beef cattle are commonly comprised of a starch-rich cereal, complemented with a protein-rich feed ingredient to satisfy published protein requirements [
4,
5]. In Ireland, barley (
Hordeum vulgare) and wheat (
Triticum) predominate as cereal crops, and are widely used as concentrate supplements in the diet of beef cattle [
4]. However Ireland, like many European countries, is a deficit animal feed country with a self-sufficiency in concentrate feeds of only 36% [
6]. Imported feed ingredients, such as maize grain (
Zea mays) and its by-products maize dried distillers (MDD) grains and maize gluten feed (MGF) [
6], are used extensively in beef cattle concentrate rations [
7,
8,
9]. There is increasing interest in further exploiting indigenous energy (e.g., alternative cereals such as oats (
Avena sativa)) and ‘protein’ (e.g., grain legumes, faba beans (
Vicia faba) and peas (
Pisum sativum)) feedstuffs in Ireland and other European countries in order to reduce the over-reliance on imports [
6,
10]. Furthermore, the sustainability of ‘local’ arable farming can be improved by using oats and legume grains as ‘break’ crops within tillage rotations, by interrupting plant disease cycles and via nitrogen-fixing legumes lowering the requirement for inorganic fertiliser and improving soil fertility [
11,
12].
Faba beans and field peas, can be attractive alternative substitutes for ‘high-protein’ feed ingredients as well as cereals in ruminant diets because of their relatively high crude protein (CP) and starch concentrations [
13,
14]. Keller et al. [
15] found that replacing maize grain and soyabean meal with faba beans in a concentrate supplement to a mixture of grass and maize silage for finishing bulls had no effect on intake, growth or carcass traits. Studies on the inclusion of peas in high-concentrate diets for finishing beef cattle replacing either dry-rolled maize plus rapeseed meal [
16] or barley plus soya bean meal [
17] reported no effects on intake, performance and carcass traits. Compared to dairy cows [
18,
19,
20,
21,
22], research on the inclusion of beans and peas in concentrates offered as supplements to grass silage for beef cattle is sparse [
14].
Maize grain is characterised by higher starch, and lower fibre and CP concentrations than barley [
23]. The feeding value of maize grain can be influenced by the processing method used [
24] such as very finely ground maize ‘meal’ [
25], which is the predominant form of inclusion in concentrate beef rations in Ireland. Most research evaluating maize meal as a feed ingredient for finishing beef cattle typically entails high-concentrate diets and, when rolled barley is partially replaced by maize meal, animal intake and performance results are inconsistent across studies [
26,
27,
28]. Oat grain is characterised by a higher fibre and fat concentration, a similar CP concentration, and a lower starch concentration than barley [
23]. However, the limited research published evaluating its role as a feed ingredient for finishing beef cattle offered grass silage has found that replacement of rolled barley with rolled oats in the concentrate supplement decreased [
29] or maintained [
30] live weight gain and feed efficiency. This disparity in findings obtained across studies for cereal types requires elucidation, especially in the context of cereal-based concentrates supplemented with conventional ‘imported’ maize by-products, or locally-produced legume grains (i.e., field beans or peas) as ‘energy-protein’ sources for beef cattle offered grass silage.
Nitrogen excretion is a contributor to emissions of ammonia, nitrogen oxide and nitrate, which have detrimental environmental effects vis-à-vis air and water quality and greenhouse gas production [
31]. Supplying protein above the ‘requirement’ of beef cattle results in excessive nitrogen excretion, mainly via urine [
32,
33]. A key strategy to reduce urinary nitrogen losses is to decrease the concentration of dietary CP [
34,
35]. In the context of increasing environmental regulations and the relatively high cost of protein feed sources, there is a need to improve nitrogen efficiency in beef production [
14,
36]. Although there is evidence to suggest that, overall, growth response to protein supplementation in finishing cattle offered grass silage-based diets is small [
37], effects are inconsistent across feeding experiments. Responses to protein supplementation, in addition to that contained in barley, are generally obtained where silage digestibility and/or protein concentration is low, and where animal growth (protein deposition) potential is high [
1], such as with ‘modern’ late-maturing suckler-bred cattle genotypes that currently predominate in Ireland. Consequently, it is important to assess and confirm if protein supplements can be excluded from cereal-based concentrate rations offered with relatively high-digestibility grass silage containing a moderately-high crude protein concentration, to cattle with a high genetic propensity for lean meat deposition without compromising animal performance, and to quantify the impact of this and alternative protein sources on nitrogen excretion.
Therefore, the objectives of the experiments outlined here were to determine, intake, growth and carcass traits of steers offered grass silage, supplemented with barley- and maize-based rations containing beans, peas, MGF or MDD (Experiment 1), or supplemented with barley and oats with or without beans and peas (Experiment 2), and to ascertain the apparent digestibility and nitrogen excretion of diets similar to those offered in Experiment 2 (Experiment 3).
4. Discussion
Europe is deficient in high-protein animal feed ingredients, and it is now a declared policy goal of the European Commission and the member states to increase domestic production of plant-based protein and reduce dependency on imports [
46]. Replacement of imported animal feed with traceable ‘locally-produced’ non-genetically modified feedstuffs, decreases the length of supply chains and also represents a significant opportunity for indigenous arable crop farmers. The overall purpose of this study was to evaluate the effect of utilising alternative ‘home-grown’ or ‘indigenous’ energy and energy-protein concentrate feed ingredients (i.e., oats, peas and beans) as supplements to grass silage for beef cattle in order to reduce imports and increase self-sufficiency in Ireland and other countries with similar temperate climates. Therefore, a primary objective in the formulation of the concentrate rations was to restrict the inclusion of feed ingredients to those produced in Ireland.
The proportion of concentrates in the dietary DM was approximately 0.40 in experiments 1 and 2, and the concentrates were fed ‘separately’ on the silage which, unlike TMR diets, permits the effect of supplement on silage intake to be quantified.
Animal DM intake relative to live weight in Experiments 1 (16.7 g/kg) and 2 (15.0 g/kg) was similar to previous studies where comparable suckler-bred genotypes were offered relatively high DMD (>715 g/kg) grass silage ad libitum and supplementary cereal-based concentrates at an equivalent ratio during the ‘finishing’ period (17.6 g/kg, McGee et al. [
47]; 18.0 g/kg, Kelly et al. [
8]; 15.1 g/kg, Doyle et al. [
48]; 15.3 g/kg, Doyle et al. [
3]). The corresponding mean daily live weight gain in Experiment 1 (0.98 kg) was also intermediate to the live weight gain range obtained in the previously cited studies (0.81–1.04 kg) and others (e.g., 1.08 kg, Regan et al. [
49]; however, the mean growth performance obtained in Experiment 2, was less than (0.64 kg) typically found. Compared to Experiment 1, estimated dietary energy supply per kg DM was slightly lower (proportionately 0.05) for Experiment 2, and metabolisable protein (PDI) supply per kg DM was similar between both experiments. Although DM intake scaled for animal weight in Experiment 2 was at the lower end of expectations, there is no obvious explanation for the relatively low growth rate overall; however, because this occurred across all dietary treatments, it is unlikely that this influenced the relative differences obtained. As all animals underwent a clinical examination and were deemed healthy by a veterinary specialist, the overall ‘underperformance’ may be attributed to reduced compensatory growth potential possibly as a result of an excessively high plane of nutrition pre-purchase/finishing [
50].
4.1. Cereal Type
Owens et al. [
51] reviewed feeding trials of cattle fed high-concentrate diets, mainly in North America, and reported no significant difference in DM intake, average daily gain, or feed-to-gain ratio between barley or maize (corn), averaged across a range of processing methods, which concurs with the present findings. Likewise, Sutherland et al. [
52] found no difference in DM intake, average daily gain or feed efficiency in ‘backgrounding’ steers offered barley silage or maize silage supplemented (0.45 of dietary DM) with either dry-rolled barley, dry-rolled maize or an equal mixture of both grains. In contrast, Steen [
53] reporting on ‘unpublished’ research found that the feeding value of maize meal was 15% greater than rolled barley when offered to finishing beef cattle as a supplement to grass silage. The superior feeding value of maize meal was attributed to the relatively slower rate of ruminal fermentation of maize starch compared to barley starch, having a less negative effect on the ruminal digestion of the fibre in grass silage. However, finishing steers offered an isonitrogenous rolled barley plus soya bean meal-based ration or a maize meal plus maize gluten feed-based concentrate as a supplement to grass silage had similar intake and performance for both concentrate types [
47]. In accord with Experiment 2, McGee et al. [
30] also found that replacing rolled barley with rolled oats in a supplement to grass silage had no impact on intake, live weight gain, feed efficiency or carcass characteristics. In contrast, Huuskonen [
29] observed lower live weight gain and poorer feed efficiency in dairy bulls offered a concentrate with increasing inclusion levels of oats as a supplement to grass silage. The oil concentration of the oats in the study by Huuskonen [
29] was much higher than in the current experiment.
The chemical composition of the individual ingredients barley, maize meal and oats offered in the current experiments were within the ranges reported in feed databases [
38,
54]. Information in modern databases concerning feeding value indicates that barley is inferior (proportionately 0.86–0.95) to maize, and oats is inferior (proportionately 0.90–0.99) to barley [
38,
54], which is contrary to the results obtained in the current experiments. Steen [
55] noted that the feeding value of feed ingredients as supplements to grass silage in practice did not reflect their published values, due to associative effects between the silage and concentrates affecting the nutrient utilisation of both the silage and the concentrates.
Collectively, the absence of a difference in Experiments 1 and 2 between the cereal types or an interaction between cereal and protein source for silage DM intake, animal live weight gain, feed efficiency, carcass weight and carcass traits, suggests that the feeding value of maize meal and rolled oats are similar to rolled barley as supplements to grass silage.
4.2. Protein Source
Where the concentrates were formulated to be isonitrogenous, this was achieved by solely changing the inclusion levels of the respective basal cereals and the ‘protein-energy’ ingredients. A consequence of this was that the quantity of each protein ingredient (and therefore cereal) included in the formulation differed between supplements, and they were purposefully not ‘balanced’ for other dietary components such as starch and fibre.
In terms of nutritive value, faba beans and peas have relatively high CP concentrations [
38,
54]; however, the degradability of faba bean and pea protein in the rumen is also very high—frequently in excess of 80%—compared to many other protein sources (e.g., 56%, maize distillers; 63%, soyabean meal) [
14,
38,
39]. This suggests that peas and beans are not ideal protein supplements for grass silage [
56], which is generally characterised by a low concentration of water soluble carbohydrates and a high proportion of soluble non-protein nitrogen [
57,
58,
59]. To overcome this, the beans and peas in the current study were ‘flaked’ to decrease the relatively high rumen degradable protein [
39,
60]; this is a common industry practice.
The peas and faba beans used in experiments 1 and 2 had lower CP, higher NDF and ADF and similar starch concentrations as in published feed databases [
38,
54]. The chemical composition of the MGF was comparable, whereas MDD had higher ADF and lower NDF than published figures [
38,
54], which may be a result of differences in the primary manufacturing processes [
61]. Peas and faba beans are assigned similar energy values in modern feed databases, whereas MDD and MGF are assigned relatively inferior feeding values of 0.97 and 0.92, respectively [
38].
In beef cattle offered grass silage to appetite supplemented with concentrate, substitution of barley plus soyabean meal with MGF in the concentrate had no effect on silage intake, growth or carcass traits [
8], whereas replacing barley plus soyabean meal with MDD in the concentrate had no effect on silage intake but increased live weight gain [
7] or decreased silage intake without affecting growth performance [
62]. The similar intake and performance for MGF and MDD in Experiment 2 is broadly consistent with these findings.
Beans did not affect intake or performance in either experiment, which is in line with the results of Keller et al. [
15] who replaced SBM with beans in a supplement for finishing bulls fed maize plus grass silage and observed no significant differences in total DMI, growth, feed efficiency or carcass traits. Similarly, Cutrignelli et al. [
63] replaced soyabean meal with faba beans in a supplement to a hay-based diet for finishing bulls reported no differences in overall growth rate between the protein sources. Compared to beans there were somewhat inconsistent results across Experiments 1 and 2 from including peas, with no difference in Experiment 1 and a tendency to negatively impact growth and feed efficiency in Experiment 2. There is no obvious reason for this disparity. In finishing beef cattle offered high-concentrate diets no difference in DM intake, live weight gain, feed efficiency or carcass traits were reported when peas replaced rolled maize plus rapeseed meal [
16] or barley plus SBM [
17] at increasing levels.
4.3. Protein Level
The mean total dietary (grass silage plus concentrates) CP supplied in Experiment 2 ranged from 133 g/kg DM for the cereal-only to 150 g/kg DM for the cereal plus protein supplement concentrates. This compares to 121 g/kg for Experiment 1, primarily reflecting the comparatively lower CP of the grass silage offered. Exclusion of supplemental protein from the concentrates in Experiment 2 did not adversely affect silage intake, daily live weight gain, feed efficiency or any carcass and carcass traits, which concurs with previous published literature on growing-finishing bulls offered high-digestibility grass silage [
64,
65] or a grass plus maize silage mixture [
15]. This implies that cereals alone provide sufficient protein for growing-finishing cattle offered high nutritive value grass silage, which is 20–50% lower than many commercially-available concentrate rations. Similarly, from a review of the literature, McGee [
1] concluded that in finishing steers offered grass silage, a performance response to protein supplementation in addition to that contained in barley was only likely when offered grass silage with low digestibility and/or low protein contents. From their meta-analysis, Huuskonen et al. [
37] concluded that increasing dietary CP concentration increased live weight gain of growing-finishing cattle fed diets mainly based on grass silage or grass silage partly or completely replaced by whole-crop silages or straw, but the growth response was minimal, and that there was generally no benefit from protein supplementation when the grass silage-based diets were not limiting rumen undegradable protein supply.
Although formulating diets on the basis of CP is a widespread practice internationally, application of the metabolisable protein system is a more precise approach for reducing nitrogen intake and associated losses from beef cattle production [
36].
The daily metabolisable protein (PDI) and net energy (UFL) requirements of a 630 kg late-maturing breed growing-finishing steer gaining 0.98 kg live weight per day (Experiment 1) are 770 g PDI and 8.1 UFL [
66]. Corresponding values for a 650 kg steer gaining 0.64 kg live weight per day (Experiment 2) are 690 g PDI and 7.1 UFL. The mean dietary PDI supply in Experiment 1 for steers offered peas, beans, MGF and MDD (based on the lower of the two values for PDIE and PDIN), were 822, 835, 838 and 857 g PDI/day. Similarly, in Experiment 2 the mean dietary PDI supply for the ‘cereal’, peas and beans were 733, 798 and 797 g PDI/day. Correspondingly, the mean dietary UFL intake daily in Experiment 1 was 10.1, 10.2, 10.2 and 10.3 for peas, beans, MGF and MDD, and in Experiment 2 was 9.0, 9.1 and 9.0 for the cereal, peas and beans diets, respectively. In both experiments, the mean PDI and UFL supply exceeded the theoretical requirements. Based on these mean consumption values, animals in Experiment 1 had adequate PDI (and net energy) to sustain a daily growth rate well in excess of 1.0 kg. In Experiment 2, the cereal-only and protein-supplemented animals had sufficient PDI to sustain a daily growth rate of 0.77 and 1.0 kg, respectively, whereas all treatments had adequate net energy to sustain a growth rate in excess of 1.0 kg/day. Collectively, the inconsistency between dietary nutrient supply and animal performance based on the INRA protein (and energy) recommendations suggests that either the ‘supply’ is overestimated or the ‘requirements’ are underestimated for late-maturing breed steers offered grass silage-based diets. Similar conclusions were reached by Cantalapiedra-Hijar et al. [
67] who compared two metabolisable protein levels to growing-fattening Charolais bulls offered a grass silage-based total mixed ration. Also, discrepancies in energy requirements of beef cattle across international feeding systems is recognised [
68]. The INRA feeding system for beef cattle is established on a range of forage diets, especially maize silage rather than grass silage, and different feeding regimes and animal genotypes, which may partially explain the discrepancy.
4.4. Rumen Fermentation, Apparent Diet Digestibility and Nitrogen Balance
The lower rumen ammonia (numerically) and plasma urea concentrations for cereal compared to peas and beans, reflected the lower nitrogen intake and urinary excretion of nitrogen [
42,
69]. The lower apparent DM, organic matter and NDF digestibility for the oats-based diets compared to the barley-based diets concurs with the findings of Huuskonen [
29], and can be attributed to oats-based diets containing higher NDF and ADF concentrations. Dry matter, organic matter, NDF and nitrogen digestibility were not influenced by protein source, which is consistent with the lack of relative differences in published digestibility figures [
38], or by CP concentration implying that the total dietary CP concentration was providing sufficient rumen degradable protein to ensure high fibre digestibility [
70].
The values for retained nitrogen for each treatment in the current study fell within the range of −6 to 109 g/d for steers fed grass silage-based diets [
71]. On average, nitrogen use efficiency (NUE) of the treatments was close to the predicted 33% for beef steers fed grass silage-based diets [
33]. Omitting a supplementary protein ingredient did not influence nitrogen retention, consistent with the similar growth performance between the comparable dietary treatments in Experiment 2, and resulted in (mainly) urinary excretion of the additional protein.
In the current experiment, reducing dietary CP level from 149 to 133 g/kg DM (11%) reduced total nitrogen excretion by 15.9%. Similarly, Keller et al. [
70] reported a reduction in urine and total nitrogen excretion in Limousin bulls when protein ingredients were omitted from a cereal-based ration offered as a supplement to grass plus maize silage; in that study reducing dietary CP from 160 to 142 g/kg DM (11.3%) reduced total nitrogen excretion by 21%. Likewise, Kirwan et al. [
72] using beef × dairy finishing heifers offered grass silage with a barley-based supplement found that reducing dietary CP from 164 to 133 g/kg DM (19%) reduced total nitrogen excretion by 20%. A reduction in nitrogen excretion, especially urinary, is critically important from an environmental perspective vis-à-vis ammonia and nitrous oxide emissions and nitrate leaching (Hristov et al., 2011).
Equations to predict nitrogen excretion from nitrogen intake by cattle offered grass silage-based diets [
33,
71] or a range of diets [
35] have been developed. Applying the equations developed by Yan et al. [
71], Jiao et al. [
33] and Angelidis et al. [
35] to our data overestimated total nitrogen excretion by 16, 1 and 6%, respectively. Application of the equations developed by Jiao et al. [
33] and Angelidis et al. [
35], which partitioned the nitrogen excretion into faecal and urinary nitrogen, to our data resulted in an underestimation of faecal nitrogen by 8% and 8%, and an overestimation of urinary nitrogen by 17 and 15%, respectively. Therefore, although the total nitrogen output can be predicted with a relatively close degree of accuracy, it is difficult to accurately predict separated faecal and urinary nitrogen excretion.