SUMMER ANNUALS CAN
PROVIDE PASTURE OR STORED FEED OPTIONS
Rory Lewandowski, Extension Educator, Wayne County
Livestock
owners that are looking for supplemental forage options should consider summer
annuals. June is the ideal time frame
for planting a warm season summer annual crop.
These forages thrive in summer heat, are drought tolerant, and can be
used for either grazing or as a stored feed.
Summer annuals include sorghum, sudangrass, sorghum x sudangrass
hybrids, millet, teff, and corn. With adequate
soil fertility and a minimum of moisture, these species are capable of
producing three to five tons of dry matter over the summer months. Most of these species can provide two to
three grazing passes or cuttings beginning 30 to 45 days after planting.
Plant
summer annuals when the soil temperature is 60 to 65 degrees F. Plant forage sorghum at 12-15 pounds/ acre,
millet, sudangrass and sorghum x sudangrass hybrids at 25 to 35 pounds/acre,
teff grass at 4 to 5 pounds/acre and corn used as forage at about 80,000
kernels/acre and seeded with a grain drill.
Soil pH should be in the 6.0 to 6.5 range, soil phosphorus should be at
least 15 ppm and soil potassium in the 100 to 125 ppm range. All summer annuals respond to nitrogen and
best yields will be obtained when 50 pounds of actual nitrogen/acre is applied
before or at planting and then again following each cutting or grazing
pass. Livestock owners that need to
summer apply manure can utilize summer annuals for this purpose.
Summer annuals can be used as a
double crop in situations where the previous crop is harvested by the end of
June. Some examples include planting a
summer annual after 1or 2 cuttings of alfalfa that needs to be rotated out of
production, or perhaps after the harvest of barley.
In
situations where the summer annual is going to be used for grazing, stagger
plant the allotted acreage. Summer
annuals grow fast and mature quickly.
Forage quality is good at young vegetative growth stages but declines
rapidly once the plant enters reproductive growth. A good strategy is to separate plantings by
14 days from the end of May through early July.
Summer annuals best suited to grazing include millet, sudangrass and
sorghum x sudangrass hybrids. The brown
mid-rib (BMR) varieties of sudangrass and sorghum x sudangrass are recommended
because they have superior digestibility compared to non-BMR varieties. Corn has also been used for grazing but only
one grazing pass is possible since corn will not regrow.
Graze sudangrass and sorghum x sudangrass
hybrids when plants are 18 to 30 inches tall. At this growth stage forage
quality will be 17 to 19% crude protein, with a neutral detergent fiber (NFD)
content of 58 to 60% and a net energy of lactation around 0.69 Mcal or a total
digestible nutrient (TDN) content of 66 to 68%. Leave a 6 to 8 inch stubble to facilitate
fast regrowth. Millet should be grazed
beginning at 12 to 18 inches in height.
Remove cattle to leave a 6 inch stubble.
Millet forage quality will be equal to or slightly higher than
sudangrass and sorghum x sudangrass hybrids when it is grazed in this
fashion. Due to the rapid maturity of
summer annuals, plan acreage based on what livestock can consume in about 10
days. If grazing was uneven and old
stems remain, clip the stubble to a uniform 6 to 8 inches after the grazing
pass.
All of the
summer annual species can be mechanically harvested for stored feed. This is really the best option if forage
sorghum or teff grass is planted. With
the exception of teff grass, baleage and silage are the best harvest and
storage options for summer annuals because they have a high moisture content
and they are difficult to dry.
Typically, forage sorghum, sorghum x sudangrass hybrids and sudangrass are
harvested at 36 to 48 inches in height while millet and teff grass are
harvested at the boot stage or approximately 36 inches in height.
One note of
caution is that summer annual crops can accumulate nitrates in the lower
portions of the stems under drought conditions.
Reduce nitrogen fertilization and manage grazing to make sure livestock
do not graze lower than 8 inches to reduce the risk of nitrate toxicity. In addition, sorghum, sorghum x sudangrass
hybrids and sudangrass all have varying levels of potential for prussic acid
poisoning if plants are consumed when they are under stress conditions.
For more
information about the use of summer annuals as a supplemental pasture or stored
feed crop, contact a member of the Extension Integrated Forages Team.