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Dive into the research topics where Daniel Rume Casagrande is active.

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Featured researches published by Daniel Rume Casagrande.


Revista Brasileira de Saúde e Produção Animal | 2012

Suplementação como estratégia de produção de carne de qualidade em pastagens tropicais

Ricardo Andrade Reis; Ana Cláudia Ruggieri; Andre Alves Oliveira; Mariana Vieira Azenha; Daniel Rume Casagrande

Grazing management and strategic supplementation can maximize the production of beef cattle on pastures in a sustainable system. Grazing intensity affects directly on individual growth, appearance and mortality rate of tillers, and also determines the herbage accumulation and canopy structure. During the rainy season is a function of grazing management to adapt the frequency and intensity of defoliation, to supply the animal with forage in an appropriate physiological stage and nutritive value. The age and size of tillers determine the proportion of lignified tissues that will reduce the digestibility of forage. During dry season, the stockpiled pasture strategies at the end of the rainy season, will be crucial to obtaining forage of highest nutritive value. The pasture management primarily aims to produce forages with high levels of potentially digestible fiber. Since then, the characterization of the forage quantity and quality are essential to adjusting the nutrients supplied by supplements to optimize the available forage utilization. Supplementation of grazing beef cattle with concentrate can increase animal performance, reduce the slaughter age, and improve the quality of carcass and meat. Moreover, it has benefits in the preparation of the animals that will be finished in feedlot, and reducing this phase. Therefore, grazing management and supplementation of the animal diet should increase productivity, and improved carcass and beef quality.


Animal Production Science | 2016

Supplementation for beef cattle on Marandu grass pastures with different herbage allowances

A. P. de Oliveira; Daniel Rume Casagrande; Liandra Maria Abaker Bertipaglia; Rondineli Pavezzi Barbero; T. T. Berchielli; Ana Cláudia Ruggieri; Ricardo Andrade Reis

The objective of this study was to evaluate the performance of beef heifers on Stapf. cv. Marandu grass pastures that were managed at three herbage allowances under continuous grazing with a variable stocking rate and were provided with mineral mix supplement or supplements with energy and protein. Seventy-two test heifers and 48 put-and-take heifers were used in a randomised design in a 3 × 2 factorial arrangement [three herbage allowances (1.5, 2.0, and 2.5 kg of green dry matter/kg of bodyweight, and two supplementation levels (mineral mix or 0.3% bodyweight of a mineral–protein–energy supplement)], with two replicates per treatment (paddocks), to maintain the pre-established forage allowance. No significant difference was observed in the gain per hectare as a function of the herbage allowance, but 2.5 kg green dry matter/kg bodyweight provided the greatest average daily gain of bodyweight (0.605 kg/animal/day). The energy/protein supplementation provided the greatest average daily gain compared with animals fed only the mineral mix. The supplements in the diet of beef heifers fed at 0.3% of bodyweight increased bodyweight gains without compromising the gain per hectare at different herbage allowances.


Journal of Dairy Science | 2017

Lining bunker walls with oxygen barrier film reduces nutrient losses in corn silages

Luciana Miranda Lima; J.P. Dos Santos; Daniel Rume Casagrande; Carolina Ávila; M.S. Lara; Thiago Fernandes Bernardes

The objective of this study was to evaluate 2 systems for covering corn silage in bunker silos. The first system consisted of a sheet of 45-μm-thick oxygen barrier film (OB, polyethylene + ethylene-vinyl alcohol) placed along the length of the sidewall before filling. After filling, the excess film was pulled over the wall on top of the silage, and a sheet of polyethylene was placed on top. The second system involved using a standard sheet (ST) of 180-μm-thick polyethylene film. Eight commercial bunker silos were divided into 2 parts lengthwise so that one-half of the silo was covered with OB and the other half with a ST system. During the filling, 3 net bags with chopped corn were buried in the central part (halfway between the top and bottom of the silo) of the bunkers (CCOR) in 3 sections 10 m apart. After filling, 18 net bags (9 per covering system) were buried 40 cm below the top surface of the 3 sections. These bags were placed at 3 distances from the bunker walls (0 to 50 cm, 51 to 100 cm, and 101 to 150 cm). During unloading, the bags were removed from the silos to determine the dry matter (DM) losses, fermentation end products, and nutritive value. The Milk2006 spreadsheet was used to estimate milk per tonne of DM. The model included the fixed effect of treatment (7 different locations in the bunker) and the random effect of the silo. Two contrasts were tested to compare silages in the top laterals (shoulders) with that in the CCOR (CCOR vs. OB and CCOR vs. ST). Three contrasts compared the corresponding distances of the silage covered by the 2 systems (OB50 vs. ST50, OB100 vs. ST100 and OB150 vs. ST150). Variables were analyzed with the PROC MIXED procedure of the SAS at the 5% level. The OB method produced well-fermented silages, which were similar to CCOR, whereas the OB system showed less lactic acid and greater pH and mold counts compared with CCOR. The ST method had 116.2 kg of milk/t less than the CCOR, as the OB system and the CCOR were similar (1,258.3 and 1,294.0 kg/t, respectively). Regarding the distances from the walls, the effects were more pronounced from 0 to 101 cm. The OB50 and OB100 silages had better quality and lower mold counts and DM losses than ST50 and ST100. The OB system reduced DM and nutrient losses at the shoulders in farm bunker corn silages compared with no sidewall plastic. The OB film should lap onto the crop for at least 200 cm so that 150 cm are covered outward from the wall.


Revista Brasileira De Zootecnia | 2012

Performance of supplemented heifers on Marandu grass pastures in the wet-to-dry transition and dry seasons

Amanda Prates Oliveira; Liandra Maria Abaker Bertipaglia; Gabriel Maurício Peruca de Melo; Telma Teresinha Berchielli; Ana Cláudia Ruggieri; Daniel Rume Casagrande; Ricardo Andrade Reis

The objective of the present study was to evaluate the characteristics of the sward canopy of Marandu grass during the rainy season, the wet-to-dry transition and the dry seasons, between March and September 2004, under intermittent grazing, and to correlate those characteristics with the performance of crossbred heifers receiving mineral supplements ad libitum or protein supplements. The experiment consisted of a randomized block design with three blocks (set of 13 paddocks), each containing five crossbred heifers per experimental unit, totaling 15 replicates. The heifers were given protein supplements daily in individual stalls and received an average 4 g/kg/day of the supplement during the rainy season and 5 g/kg/day during the dry season. Their weight gain was assessed monthly. The pasture structure was assessed through destructive sampling, and the bromatological composition of esophageal extrusa samples was also assessed. Analysis of variance was used to assess performance, and regression analysis was used to evaluate the sward canopy characteristics in relation to the months of the year. A cluster procedure was used to determine the similarity between the months of the year under assessment. Two different groups were formed for pasture evaluation: one group including the months of March to July and another group including the months of August and September. The first group exhibited a better canopy structure than the second group. This fact was corroborated by the animal performance, which was lower during the months of the second group. Low-intake protein supplementation was effective in increasing the performance of the grazing heifers. Pasture structure is critical for animal performance in a grazing environment, regardless of the type of supplementation.


African Journal of Range & Forage Science | 2017

Defoliation management affects morphogenetic and structural characteristics of mixed pastures of brachiaria grass and forage peanut

Juliana C. Pereira; Fernanda K. Gomes; Michael D.B.L. Oliveira; Marcio A. S. Lara; Thiago Fernandes Bernardes; Daniel Rume Casagrande

A sound understanding of the effects of defoliation management in a grass–legume pasture is key in balancing populations between species. The aim of this study was to quantify the morphogenetic and structural characteristics and forage production of brachiaria grass and forage peanut mixtures under four defoliation strategies. A two-year experiment was carried out in Brazil (Cwa climate), where the following treatments were studied: rest period interruption by cattle grazing when the canopy attained light interception (LI) of 90%, 95% and 100%, and grazing performed every 42 d. Morphogenetic and structural characteristics of both species were measured. The forage and leaf accumulation rates were also quantified. The design was randomised blocks, with three replications, and repeated measurements over time. The 100% LI had greater stem and stolon elongation rates and a lower leaf appearance rate in both species and fewer tillers or stolons when compared with the other strategies. Conversely, rest periods of 90–95% LI promoted an increase of about 30% on forage and leaf accumulation rates of both grass and legume. Therefore, to enhance productivity and stability when these species are associated we recommend defoliating at 90–95% LI, which represents a canopy height ranging from 26 to 32 cm.


Scientia Agricola | 2015

Xaraés palisadegrass remains productive after the disappearance of stylo in tropical legume-grass pasture

Rodrigo Carvalho Menezes; Eveline Bueno Alves; Daniel Rume Casagrande; Márcio André Stefanelli Lara; Antônio Ricardo Evangelista; Thiago Fernandes Bernardes

Gradual reduction of legumes in mixed tropical pastures requires periodic oversowing. Exploiting the carrying capacity of grass for an extra year after the disappearance of legumes can be economically advantageous to the farmer. This study aimed to evaluate the productivity of Xaraes palisadegrass (Brachiaria brizantha) pastures in response to its historical association with stylo (Stylosanthes guianensis) under two canopy heights to determine whether different grazing management conditions affect the defoliation pattern left by grazing animals. The split-plot experimental design was used, with the historical botanical composition (HBC) (24, 34, 45 and 52 % legume composition) corresponding to the main plots and the canopy frequency of defoliation determined at heights of 30 and 45 cm for Xaraes palisadegrass corresponding to the subplots with two replicates (500 m2) grazed by Tabapua cows. Pastures with over 34 % stylo in the botanical composition remained productive for one year after legume disappearance, accumulating more than 8 mg ha−1 of forage per year. Xaraes palisadegrass pastures at a height of 30 cm provided better canopy structure, with 64 % less stem production and 43 % less dead material. The 30-cm pre-grazing canopy height provided a grazing environment conducive to forage intake by animals that resulted in efficient use of the pasture. In response to the improved canopy structure, the cows grazed an average of 60 fewer minutes. A HBC greater than 34 % of legumes in the pastures allows for the postponement of legume oversowing until the next growing season.


Revista Brasileira De Zootecnia | 2013

Performance and carcass quality of feedlot- or pasture-finished Nellore heifers according to feeding managements in the postweaning phase

Daniel Rume Casagrande; Mariana Vieira Azenha; Bruno Ramalho Vieira; Flávio Dutra de Resende; Marcelo Henrique de Faria; Telma Teresinha Berchielli; Ana Cláudia Ruggieri; Ricardo Andrade Reis

The objective of this study was to evaluate the postweaning history of heifers kept on marandu grass pastures with three canopy heights, in a continuous-grazing system, during the rainy period, on feedlot- or pasture finishing. The effects of three canopy heights (15, 25 and 35 cm) associated with two supplements (mineral salt and protein-energy supplement) and two finishing systems in the dry period (feedlot and open pasture) were studied in the postweaning period during the rainy season. The adopted design was completely randomized, with seven replications (animals) in a 2 × 2 factorial arrangement. The animals which received protein-energy supplement reached the finishing period with greater body weight in relation to those fed mineral salt. In both feedlot and pasture finishing systems, compensatory gain effect was observed in the animals that remained on the low pastures during postweaning compared with the high pastures. This compensatory gain was not verified in the animals that received protein-energy supplement in relation to the mineral salt, and thus the animals were slaughtered beforehand. The heifers on pastures with 25 or 35 cm in height were slaughtered in the same period, and those kept on the low pastures were slaughtered afterwards. The studied factors in the postweaning phase did not affect the carcass characteristics. Animals finished in feedlot slaughtered with the same body weight as those finished on pasture show greater carcass yield, subcutaneous fat deposition and renal pelvic and inguinal fat and greater losses with trimmings for cleaning the main hindquarter meat cuts; however, they provide cuts with the same weight but greater fat cover.


Journal of Animal Science | 2018

Effects of grazing management in brachiaria grass-forage peanut pastures on canopy structure and forage intake1

Fernanda K. Gomes; Michael D.B.L. Oliveira; Bruno Grossi Costa Homem; Robert M. Boddey; Thiago Fernandes Bernardes; M. P. Gionbelli; Márcio André Stefanelli Lara; Daniel Rume Casagrande

Maintenance of mixed grass-legume pastures for stand longevity and improved animal utilization is a challenge in warm-season climates. The goal of this study was to assess grazing management on stand persistence, forage intake, and N balance of beef heifers grazing mixed pastures of Brachiaria brizantha and Arachis pintoi. A two-year experiment was carried out in Brazil, where four grazing management were assessed: rest period interrupted at 90%, 95%, and 100% of light interception (LI) and a fixed rest period of 42 days (90LI, 95LI, 100LI, and 42D, respectively). The LI were taken at 50 points at ground level and at five points above the canopy for each paddock using a canopy analyzer. For all treatments, the post-grazing stubble height was 15 cm. Botanical composition and canopy structure characteristics such as canopy height, forage mass, and vertical distribution of the morphological composition were evaluated pre-and post-grazing. Forage chemical composition, intake, and microbial synthesis were also determined. A randomized complete block design was used, considering the season of the year as a repeated measure over time. Grazing management and season were considered fixed, while block and year were considered random effects. In the summer, legume mass accounted for 19% of the canopy at 100LI, which was less than other treatments (a mean of 30%). The 100LI treatment had a greater grass stem mass compared with other treatments. In terms of vertical distribution for 100LI, 38.6% of the stem mass was above the stubble height, greater than the 5.7% for other treatments. The canopy structure limited neutral detergent fiber intake (P = 0.007) at 100LI (1.02% of BW/d), whereas 42D, 90LI, and 95LI treatments had NDF intake close to 1.2% of BW/d. The intake of digestible organic matter (OM; P = 0.007) and the ratio of crude protein/digestible OM (P < 0.001) were less at 100LI in relation to the other treatments. The production of microbial N (P < 0.001) and efficiency of microbial synthesis (P = 0.023) were greater at 95LI and 90LI, followed by 42D and less at 100LI. Overall, the range from 90 to 95% of LI is the recommendation to interrupt the rest period, since this strategy enhanced community stability, forage intake, and nutritional value of the diet. Under on-farm conditions, brachiaria grass and forage peanut pastures should be managed at a range height of 24 to 30 cm.


Revista de Ciências Agrarias - Amazon Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences | 2013

Produção e uso de silagens em fazendas leiteiras em três mesorregiões do Estado de Minas Gerais

Thiago Fernandes Bernardes; Aníbal Coutinho do Rêgo; Daniel Rume Casagrande; Márcio André Stefanelli Lara; Luciana Miranda Lima; Naiara Caixeta da Silva

Dairies from three zones (Central, Centro-oeste and Campos das Vertentes) of Minas Gerais state, Brazil, were invited to participate in current survey on silage management practices on their farms. Thirty-nine dairies filled a questionnaire on a special day organized for dairy producers in Ijaci, Minas Gerais state, Brazil. The twenty- two questions of the questionnaire comprised information on characteristics of herds on farms (n=3), characteristics inherent to silage process (n=9), characteristics associated with feed-out (n=4), characteristics inherent to silage used in diet (n=3) and three other questions. Corn silage was mentioned by most of the 39 producers interviewed. Thirty-eight (97.4%) stated that corn was used alone or with other crops. Most producers (92.3%) used pull-type forage harvesters and black-on-white plastic sheets were mentioned by 84.6% of producers to seal the silos. Further, 61.5% of dairies unloaded less than 20 cm of silage per day and 87.2% discarded spoiled silage prior to feeding the animals, although 92.3% failed to undertake any chemical analysis of silage produced. The use of simple management techniques such as the correct feed-out rate, type of plastic sheets used to cover the silos, and the material used to weigh down the silo surfaces are still impairments in obtaining less deteriorated silages with the least possible waste rates.


Arquivo Brasileiro De Medicina Veterinaria E Zootecnia | 2013

Substituição de monensina sódica por bicarbonato de sódio em dietas de novilhas confinadas

Amanda Prates Oliveira; Ricardo Andrade Reis; Liandra Maria Abaker Bertipaglia; G.m.p. Melo; Telma Teresinha Berchielli; João Ademir de Oliveira; Daniel Rume Casagrande; M.a.a. Balsalobre

The effects of replacing monensin with sodium bicarbonate in diets for confined heifers on weight gain (WG), dry matter intake (DMI), feed:gain ratio (FGR) and rumen fermentation parameters were evaluated. Fifity six heifers were utilized (Santa Gertrudis x Braunvieh). Diets were formulated with two levels of concentrate (50% and 80% concentrate) with sodium monensin or sodium bicarbonate. The DMI was higest in heifers with an intake of 80% concentrate. There was not difference when the same concentrate levels were evaluated in relation to the DMI. The heifers at 80% concentrate showed highest WG. There was no significant difference in relation to WG between monensin and bicarbonate treatments and levels concentrate proportions. There were significant effects regarding FGR between treatments. The heifers on 80% concentrate showed lowest FGR. In the evaluation of N-NH3, the highest values were observed, on the whole, at 80:20 diets in relation to 50:50 diets. In the additive use, the monensin on 80:20 diets promoted the highest values of N-NH3 at 1 for 9 hours after feed intake. In the values of ruminal pH, the bicarbonate increased the values on 50:50 at 6 for18 hours after feed intake, in relation to the 80:20 diet. In this case, it was concluded that the use of sodium bicarbonate in diets for confined finishing heifers is a viable option for the replacement of monensin sodium.

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Luciana Miranda Lima

Universidade Federal de Lavras

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Diego Tassinari

Universidade Federal de Lavras

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Fernanda K. Gomes

Universidade Federal de Lavras

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Michael D.B.L. Oliveira

Universidade Federal de Lavras

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