Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-t7czq Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-29T12:28:23.395Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Application of Magnesium Sulphate to Grass for Silage as a means of Preventing Hypomagnesaemic Tetany

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 May 2016

P. McDonald
Affiliation:
Edinburgh and East of Scotland College of Agriculture
T. H. Jackson
Affiliation:
Edinburgh and East of Scotland College of Agriculture
Get access

Extract

The incidence of hypomagnesaemic tetany in cattle and sheep can be reduced considerably by increasing the dietary intake of magnesium (Allcroft, R., 1954; Allcroft, W. M., 1947; Bartlett et al., 1954; Stewart, 1954) and the commonest method of supplementing the ration is to provide a mineral mixture containing magnesium oxide. While the feeding of these mineral supplements to animals wintered indoors is relatively straightforward, ensuring that animals grazing on hill and marginal land will obtain a regular supply of the mineral raises a problem. Where animals are receiving silage in addition to natural grazings during the winter, the inclusion of a magnesium compound in the grass at the time of ensiling is one method of increasing the magnesium content of the diet. The oxide and carbonate of magnesium are probably the safest compounds for feeding to stock, but unfortunately these are likely to have an adverse effect on the preservation, resulting in inferior silage. Experiments carried out in small silo units at Boghall Farm proved this to be the case (E.E.S.C.A. Ann. Rep. 1955). Magnesium sulphate is likely to have little effect upon the preservation of silage, and although this compound is not ideally suitable as a magnesium supplement owing to its laxative properties, it was decided to investigate the value of using it in restricted quantity and intimately mixed with the silage, as a suitable means of preventing hypo-magnesaemia when fed during the winter to a herd of 18 outwintered Galloway cows.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The British Society of Animal Production 1955

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Allcroft, R., 1954. Hypomagnesaemia in cattle. Vet. Rec, 66: 517.Google Scholar
Allcroft, W. M., 1947. Seasonal hypomagnesaemia of the bovine without clinical symptoms. Brit. vet. J., 103: 75.Google ScholarPubMed
Bartlett, S., Brown, B. B., Foot, A. S., Rowlands, J., Allcroft, R., & Parr, W. H., 1954. The incidence of fertiliser treatment of grassland on the incidence of hypomagnesaemia in milking cows. Brit. vet. J., 110: 3.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Edinburgh and East of Scotland College of Agriculture Annual Report 1954-55.Google Scholar
Stewart, J., 1954. Hypomagnesaemia and tetany of cattle and sheep. Scot. Agric., 34: 68.Google Scholar