Thursday, March 28, 2024
HomeGrazing ManagementTurn Sunshine Into $ by Understanding How Plants Grow

Turn Sunshine Into $ by Understanding How Plants Grow

Turning Sunlight Into Money Via Livestock
The goal for pasture-based producers is to sustainably convert sunlight to net cash income. Understanding how plants grow makes it easier.

 

Raising livestock on pasture is like a miracle. It starts with nothing more than an egg from the dam and a sperm from the sire. Then a cow, ewe, or doe produces an offspring. Pastures full of plants gather sunlight, making food for the grazing animals. The animals turn forage into body weight and maybe even milk. If all goes well, at the end of the season we have a new 500 pound calf or a set of twin lambs or kids.

Understanding the intricacies behind this miracle can help us improve pasture production, quality, utilization and animal performance.  It also enables us to see how to adapt to change in weather and interpret how research and farmer experience from other areas applies to our operation.  So let’s start with the first part of the miracle, how plants use sunshine to grow.

Photosynthesis

Next time you're in the mood for something sweet, how about a broccoli hot fudge sundae?! Mmmmm!
Next time you’re in the mood for something sweet, how about a broccoli hot fudge sundae?! Mmmmm!

Kids who don’t appreciate their veggies probably aren’t aware of all the sugar they contain.  Through a process we all know as photosynthesis, a plant uses its green pigments (chlorophyll) to absorb energy from the sun.  Then the plant draws in a deep breath of CO2 (carbon dioxide), and combines the CO2 with water and the sun’s energy to produce simple sugars.  A botanist writes it like this:

6 CO2 + 6 H2O → C6H12O6 + 6 O2

How the plant uses those sugars depends on the time of year and the age of the plant. Young plants, like teenage kids, use the sugars for growth spurts.  As the plant nears middle age, it doesn’t need all the sugars being produced, so it stores them for the future, just like aging adults tend to store excess calories in bellies and guts.  It’s a good survival mechanism in a world where grazing and weather conditions might require the plant to regrow again from time to time.

Respiration = Knowing when to move animals to new pasture

respiration definitionRespiration for plants means more than breathing. When plants respire they convert sugars to carbon dioxide and water to perform plant metabolic functions (grow, and store energy).  That’s what this formula means:

C6H12O6 + 6 O2 → 6 CO2 + 6 H2O

A plant respires 24 hours a day, using the carbohydrates created by photosynthesis. There is more sugar during the day, as the plant uses photosynthesis to build up carbohydrates.  During the night, respiration continues, but the absence of photosynthesis means there is a net loss of carbohydrates. We see this in the cycle of sugar in  plant leaves.  The sugar content in leaves is lowest at sunrise.  During the day, leaf sugar content increases and sugars are used for leaf and root growth and are stored for reserve energy.  This energy use can be important as it also means that the sugar content of plants cycles over the course of the day.

All these changes in sugar content make it hard to use brix as a measure of forage nutrition. You can read more about that here:

Here’s Why We Don’t Use Brix to Measure Forage Quality

 

If it's mid-afternoon, these cows should be eating!
If it’s mid-afternoon, these cows should be eating!

Why is it helpful to know about changes in sugar over the course of the day?

Here are a couple of reasons:

We can make sure our livestock are getting the best forage possible if we  move them midday or early afternoon. That is when they are likely to be loafing, rather than grazing. Getting them to get up and get on some new pasture may inspire them to eat more, and to eat forage at its peak sugar content.

Interestingly, research has demonstrated that animals can tell the difference between hay cut in the morning and hay cut in the afternoon.  They get the good feedback from the extra sugars in the afternoon plants and will choose what to eat accordingly.  Think about this when you’re cutting hay and see if you can manage your schedule to cut when your plants are most nutritious.

Next week:  How to intercept the most sunlight possible by paying attention to canopy height.  Here’s a hint:  Make it tall in summer and short in fall.

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Ed Rayburn
Ed Rayburn
Ed is the Forage Extension Specialist at West Virginia University. He works with other specialists, county agents, farmers, and NRCS staff in developing and implementing on-farm research and educational programs to support pasture-based livestock production and helps landowners develop economically and environmentally sustainable production systems on their farms. He was technical editor for the four volume NRAES book series on pasture-based livestock production. He previously worked for the USDA-Soil Conservation Service in western New York as a Grassland Specialist serving dairy and livestock producers in the 15 western counties of New York. Ed, his wife Sue, their three border collies, and 30 cows manage a pasture-based farm in Preston County West Virginia

1 COMMENT

  1. I know I have cried about winter being too muddy, even too cold, I have read and heard Victor Shelton say free concrete this time of year is welcome. I can only smile with snow before the upcoming arctic weather, how snug our pastures seem with 8” of snow protection when temps actual and wind chill drop below ZERO, cows went out after snow and played like we did when we were children, with increasing winds they look at me like I am crazy when I open the gate let them out.
    A lot of words to say we should take time to eat the roses even in winter.😀

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