Michael J. Cecava
Archer Daniels Midland
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Featured researches published by Michael J. Cecava.
Journal of Dairy Science | 2009
Shawn S. Donkin; Stephanie L. Koser; H.M. White; Perry H. Doane; Michael J. Cecava
Growth of the corn ethanol industry has created a need for alternatives to corn for lactating dairy cows. Concurrent expansion in soydiesel production is expected to increase availability and promote favorable pricing for glycerol, a primary co-product material. The objective of this study was to determine the feeding value of glycerol as a replacement for corn in diets fed to lactating dairy cattle. Sixty lactating Holstein cows housed in individual tie stalls were fed a base diet consisting of corn silage, legume forages, corn grain, soyhulls, roasted soybeans, and protein supplements. After a 2-wk acclimation period, cows were fed diets containing 0, 5, 10, or 15% refined glycerol for 56 d. Cows were milked twice daily and weekly milk samples were collected. Milk production was 36.3, 37.2, 37.9, and 36.2 +/- 1.6 kg/d and feed intake was 23.8, 24.6, 24.8, and 24.0 +/- 0.7 kg/d for 0, 5, 10, and 15% glycerol treatments, respectively, and did not differ except for a modest reduction in feed intake during the first 7 d of the trial for 15% glycerol (treatment x time effect). Milk composition was not altered by glycerol feeding except that milk urea nitrogen was decreased from 12.5 +/- 0.4 to 10.2 +/- 0.4 mg/dL with glycerol addition. Cows fed diets containing 10 and 15% glycerol gained more weight than those fed rations containing 0 or 5% glycerol but body condition scores did not differ with glycerol feeding. The data indicate that glycerol is a suitable replacement for corn grain in diets for lactating dairy cattle and that it may be included in rations to a level of at least 15% of dry matter without adverse effects on milk production or milk composition.
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2008
Marcial Guevara; Laura L. Bauer; Charles Abbas; Kyle E. Beery; David P. Holzgraefe; Michael J. Cecava; George C. Fahey
The objective was to examine the chemical composition, in vitro fermentation characteristics, and in vivo digestibility responses of fiber-rich corn coproducts resulting from corn wet milling. Native corn fibers, native corn fibers with fines, hydrolyzed corn fibers, and hydrolyzed extracted corn fibers were analyzed chemically and their capacity to produce short-chain fatty acids determined. Ash content was low (<1.2%), crude protein content varied little, but fat and fiber concentrations varied widely. Most fiber was in the insoluble form, with glucose being predominant followed by xylose. Total short-chain fatty acid production ranged from 211.6 to 699.52 micromol/g of dry matter, whereas branched-chain fatty acid production was low. Four corn fibers (native and processed) were included in a canine diet matrix at the 7% inclusion level. Nutrient digestibility, food intake, and fecal characteristics were not affected by corn fiber inclusion in canine diets, suggesting that they should be considered as potential dietary fiber sources in dog foods.
Archive | 2006
Charles Abbas; Thomas P. Binder; Kyle E. Beery; Michael J. Cecava; Perry H. Doane; David P. Holzgraefe; Leif Solheim
Archive | 2008
Charles Abbas; Wu-Li Bao; Kyle E. Beery; Michael J. Cecava; Perry H. Doane; James L. Dunn; David P. Holzgraefe
Archive | 2006
Stephanie S. Block; Michael J. Cecava; Perry H. Doane
Archive | 2007
Stephanie S. Block; Michael J. Cecava; Perry H. Doane; Mark Franklin; L. Kamel; Nathan Pyatt; Hong Yang
Archive | 2008
Michael J. Cecava; Perry H. Doane; David P. Holzgraefe; Nathan Pyatt
Archive | 2006
Michael J. Cecava; Perry H. Doane; James L. Dunn
Animal Frontiers | 2013
Shawn S. Donkin; Perry H. Doane; Michael J. Cecava
Archive | 2010
Michael J. Cecava; Perry H. Doane; James L. Dunn