Track 1-16: Production, Environment and Social Benefit of Agroforestry Systems
Description
Shrub and tree forages are commonly used in animal production in many regions of the world. Nonetheless, in Western Europe, and especially in Wallonia in Belgium, hedges and woody strips have disappeared from the agricultural landscape over the past 60 years. Browse species are usually rich in plant secondary compounds such as tannins whose benefits on CH4 production and intestinal parasitism have been highlighted (Ramírez-Restrepo et al. 2010). Currently, agri-environmental measures taken by the Walloon government promote hedges and woody strips in pastures, raising the interest in browse species functionalities in ruminant production.
This study aimed at: (1) determining the influence of the access to a hedge on the behaviour of cattle on pasture; and (2) evaluating the fermentability by rumen microbes of foliage of woody species promoted in the Walloon landscape.
Citation
Vandermeulen, Sophie; Pascal, Mathilde; Marche, Christian; Pilet, Arnaud; Beckers, Yves; and Bindelle, Jérôme, "Hedges and Woody Strips Browsing by Cattle on Pasture in Wallonia, Belgium" (2020). IGC Proceedings (1993-2023). 6.
https://uknowledge.uky.edu/igc/22/1-16/6
Included in
Hedges and Woody Strips Browsing by Cattle on Pasture in Wallonia, Belgium
Shrub and tree forages are commonly used in animal production in many regions of the world. Nonetheless, in Western Europe, and especially in Wallonia in Belgium, hedges and woody strips have disappeared from the agricultural landscape over the past 60 years. Browse species are usually rich in plant secondary compounds such as tannins whose benefits on CH4 production and intestinal parasitism have been highlighted (Ramírez-Restrepo et al. 2010). Currently, agri-environmental measures taken by the Walloon government promote hedges and woody strips in pastures, raising the interest in browse species functionalities in ruminant production.
This study aimed at: (1) determining the influence of the access to a hedge on the behaviour of cattle on pasture; and (2) evaluating the fermentability by rumen microbes of foliage of woody species promoted in the Walloon landscape.