Author: Kelly Myers, Dairy Science Graduate; Katharine Knowlton, Assistant Professor of Nutrition; and Gerald M. Jones, Professor and Extension Dairy Scientist; Department of Dairy Science, Virginia Tech
Publication Number 404-120, Posted December 2000
There is a direct relationship between phosphorus (P) levels in dairy cattle rations and the amount of phosphorus excreted in manure. The phosphorus content of manure varies significantly with the diet and depends on the level of P and ingredient composition of the diet. Approximately 80% of consumed phosphorus is excreted when fed in excess. While some of the P excreted is truly indigestible feed P (45-60%), a large proportion of excess P is excreted.
Dietary P content needed by a 1320 lb cow with varying milk yield and DMI
| Milk yield, lbs/d | DMI, lbs/d | % P needed in diet | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 66 | 42 | .40 | ||
| 46 | .37 | |||
| 50 | .34 | |||
| 88 | 50 | .42 | ||
| 54 | .39 | |||
| 58 | .37 | |||
| 110 | 58 | .44 | ||
| 62 | .41 | |||
| 66 | .39 |
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The common perception among dairy producers, nutritionists, and veterinarians is that higher levels of dietary P, that is higher than National Research Council (NRC) guidelines, improves reproduction. Underfeeding P (dietary levels of .20 to .25%) is known to impair reproductive performance; however, years of research indicate that there is no benefit to feeding P greater than NRC recommendations. A University of Wisconsin study compared two different phosphorus levels in rations over two years.
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Unlike nitrogen, phosphorus fixed in the soil is relatively stable and doesn't leach to ground water. Instead, it accumulates in soil. Scientists have found that with very high soil test P, P can run off even without erosion. But the P leaving farms, either bound to soil or dissolved in water, accumulates in surface water and can pollute ponds, streams, and lakes. Like excess nitrogen, excess phosphorus causes algae populations to grow or to "bloom" in the water. Increased algae populations consume oxygen in water, the same oxygen which fish need to survive. The absence of oxygen in water causes fish to die.
What's the phosphorus content of common feedstuffs?
| Forages | P, % of DM | Concentrates | P, % of DM |
|---|---|---|---|
| Alfalfa hay, early bloom | 0.22 | Barley grain | 0.38 |
| Alfalfa silage, early bloom | 0.31 | Brewers grains | 0.57 |
| Barley silage | 0.28 | Corn grain | 0.27 |
| Corn silage | 0.22 | Ear corn | 0.29 |
| Orchardgrass, early bloom | 0.32 | Cottonseed, whole | 0.62 |
| Rye silage | 0.32 | Cottonseed meal, 41% CP | 1.16 |
| Sorghum sudan silage | 0.21 | Distillers grains | 0.43 |
| Peanut meal | 0.66 | ||
| Wheat grain | 0.43 | ||
| Wheat midds | 1.00 | ||
| Fishmeal | 3.14 | ||
| Soybean meal | 0.71 | ||
| Wheat bran | 1.38 |
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Phosphorus excretion in manure can be reduced if the content of P in diets is reduced to meet, but not exceed, the cows true requirements, using NRC guidelines. A Virginia Tech survey of 33 Virginia dairy farms found that P losses could be reduced by 45% or more if rations were formulated according to current published NRC requirements.
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