Silage production and bromatological constitution effects of corn hybrids in different environments

Authors

  • Ivan Ricardo Carvalho
  • Velci Queiróz de Souza
  • Diego Nicolau Follmann
  • Maicon Nardino
  • Alan Junior de Pelegrin
  • Mauricio Ferrari
  • Valmor Antonio Konflanz
  • Rafael Lazzari
  • Juliano Uczay

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.19084/RCA15130

Abstract

The aim of this study was to assess silage corn hybrids morphological, productive and bromatological parameters in irrigated and non-irrigated environmental conditions. The research was held in the 2010/2011 season, Campos Borges – RS. The experimental design was randomized blocks in factorial design, with two environments x eight corn hybrids, arranged in three replications. Analysis of variance showed environment x corn hybrids interaction significance for plant height, fresh and dry matter per hectare, dry matter percentage, mineral matter, crude protein, neutral detergent fiber, lignin, total and non-fibrous carbohydrates. In the irrigated environment, hybrids showed higher plant height, chlorophyll content, leaf area, fresh and dry matter per hectare, silage dry matter percentage, pH, mineral material, neutral detergent fiber, cellulose and lignin. Non-fibrous and total carbohydrate levels were higher for the non-irrigated environment. Crude protein content was higher in the non-irrigated environment. In the irrigated environment HS1356 hybrid showed higher plant height, fresh and dry matter per hectare, mineral material and neutral detergent fiber. HT4 hybrid led to higher silage crude protein content in the irrigated environment.

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Published

2019-01-06

Issue

Section

General