Eric A Bailey

Eric A Bailey
University of Missouri | Mizzou · Division of Animal Sciences

PhD

About

46
Publications
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230
Citations

Publications

Publications (46)
Article
The objective of the study was to determine effects of increasing amounts of conventional (CONV) or high-oleic (HO) soybean in diets fed to mid-lactation dairy cows on dry matter intake (DMI) and performance. Rumen and duodenally cannulated cows (n = 8) were split into two groups and placed in a split-plot design. The whole plot factor was type of...
Article
Soybeans can provide ruminally degradable protein, lipid and metabolizable amino acid (AA) to lactating dairy cows; however, soy-based trypsin inhibitors can limit protein digestion in nonruminants. Eight ruminally cannulated lactating Holstein cows were used to evaluate the impacts of soy-based trypsin inhibitors on nutrient disappearance, lactati...
Article
Plant secondary metabolites (PSM) such as condensed tannins, hydrolysable tannins, saponins and essential oils purportedly impact rumen fermentation at low inclusion rates in beef cattle diets. Twelve steers (347 ± 23 kg BW) of British and continental influence were allocated to 1 of 4 replicated 3 x 3 Latin squares. Latin squares each had 14 d per...
Article
Probiotics are purported to improve gastrointestinal tract health across a variety of species. Thus, we evaluated the effects of supplementing a blend of Bacillus spp. on performance and immune function in immature beef cattle. Crossbred heifers (n = 192) were stratified by initial body weight (196 ± 15.4 kg) and randomly assigned to 1 of 24 pastur...
Article
Crossbred steers (n = 60; beginning BW 454 ± 24 kg) were used in a split-plot design with a 2 x 3 factorial arrangement of treatments to determine effects of source of metabolizable AA and implant status on animal performance and feeding behavior. Calves were blocked by initial BW and assigned to 1 of 5 BW blocks. Pen (n = 2 pens, 6 steer/pen) with...
Article
The objective of this experiment was to evaluate effects of postruminal flows of casein or glutamic acid on small intestinal starch digestion and to quantify changes in energy and nutrient balance. Twenty-four steers (body weight = 179 ± 4 kg) were duodenally infused with raw cornstarch (1.46 ± 0.04 kg/d) and either 413 ± 7.0 g casein/d, 121 ± 3.6...
Article
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Aluminosilicate-based flow agents, like zeolites, may impact digestion of ergot-like alkaloids in the ruminant gut. Twenty-four steers (226 ± 27.6 kg) were used in a 21-d experiment to test the effects of an enhanced zeolite-based flow agent (KALLSIL, Kemin Industries, Des Moines, IA) on site of ergot-like alkaloid excretion, serum prolactin, recta...
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Injection of bromocriptine mesylate has been used to mimic the symptoms of tall fescue toxicosis in beef cattle. Twelve steers (351 ± 11.82 kg) were used to investigate the effect of bromocriptine mesylate and heat stress on serum prolactin, rectal temperature, respiration rate, and innate/adaptive immune function. Steers were randomly assigned to...
Article
Forty Holstein bull calves were fed 1 of 3 starch-based milk replacers for either 10 or 35 days to determine responses in organ mass and small intestinal length. Calves (87.2 ± 7.7 kg) were bottle-fed a cornstarch-based milk replacer (727 g of cornstarch daily) alone, milk replacer with added casein (154.7 g/d) or milk replacer with added glutamate...
Article
This study used 18 calves (295 ± 29 kg) and 18 yearlings (521 ± 29 kg) fed whole, cracked or steam-flaked corn (SFC) to evaluate nutrient digestion and energy balance across different types of processed corn and sizes of cattle. Cattle were fed a diet comprised of 75% corn (DM-basis) from whole, cracked or SFC to 2.5-times maintenance energy requir...
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Providing supplements that enhance the efficiency of feed utilization can reduce methane (CH4) emissions from ruminants. Protein supplementation is widely used to increase intake and digestion of low-quality forages, yet little is known about its impact on CH4 emissions. British-cross steers (n = 23; Initial BW = 344 ± 33.9 kg) were used in a three...
Chapter
Nutrient requirements of beef cows vary in a predictable manner relative to the timing of breeding, weaning, and calving. This chapter focuses on strategic management of the 12‐month cow‐calf production cycle to leverage economic and biological efficiencies to support body energy and protein reserves of breeding females. Related issues such as heif...
Article
Two experiments were conducted to evaluate the bioavailability of AA between polymerized and less polymerized or unpolymerized sources of AA. In the first experiment, 6 bull calves (53.8 ± 0.6 kg of body weight) were bottle-fed milk replacer that contained 0, 60, or 120 additional grams of AA from casein or acid hydrolyzed casein every 12 h. Plasma...
Article
Objectives The objective was to determine the effects of degree of steam flaking of corn (SFC) on performance of finishing cattle fed diets containing wet distillers grains with solubles (WDGS). Materials and Methods Crossbred steers (n = 214: initial BW = 357 ± 26.0 kg) and heifers (n = 121: initial BW = 323 ± 30.9 kg) were randomly assigned to 5...
Article
Chemical seed-head suppression of endophyte infected tall fescue (Lolium arundinaceum) improves stocker cattle performance but may decrease forage yield. Spring nitrogen application increases tall fescue growth with a concomitant increase in ergot alkaloids, produced by the symbiotic endophyte Epichloë coenophiala. We hypothesized that greater amou...
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Addition of alkaline compounds at harvest may affect in vitro digestion and ergot alkaloid concentrations in endophyte-infected tall fescue silage. Silage (n = 60; 10 replications/treatment) was produced by filling vacuum-sealing plastic bags (35.5 cm by 27.9 cm) with 150 g of K31 tall fescue (DM basis; forage DM=76.9%; 96% endophyte infection rate...
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Prescribed fire may be a non-chemical alternative for seedhead suppression in endophyte-infected tall fescue forage systems. A study was conducted to observe the effects of a single prescribed burn on seed head production, ergot alkaloid concentration, forage production, forage quality, and stand composition in K31 tall fescue plots (endophyte infe...
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Various anecdotes suggest the combination of supplemental protein and yeast improve utilization of low-quality forage. Two studies were conducted to evaluate effects of a commercially available supplement containing protein and yeast on fermentation in single-flow continuous culture fermenters. In Exp. 1, Bermuda grass with no supplement (NCON1), d...
Article
Full-text available
A fungal endophyte, Epichloë coenophiala (Morgan‐Jones & W. Gams) C.W. Bacon & Schardl, naturally infects tall fescue [Lolium arundinaceum (Schreb.) Darbysh.]. The common, toxic endophyte produces ergot alkaloids that cause the livestock disorder known as tall fescue toxicosis. Strains of E. coenophiala that produce little or no toxic ergot alkaloi...
Article
Two experiments were conducted to measure rates of ruminal disappearance, and energy and nutrient availability and N balance among cows fed corn husks, leaves or stalks. Ruminal disappearance was estimated after incubation of polyester bags containing husks, leaves or stalks in 2 separate ruminally cannulated cows in a completely randomized block d...
Article
Estimates of diet quality from samples of mechanically harvested corn residues likely under-predict nutrient density in diets selected by grazing cattle. Our objective was to determine if measures of chemical composition or near-infrared reflectance spectroscopy (NIRS) of diet samples collected from ruminally cannulated cows could allow accurate es...
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Six ruminally cannulated cows (570 ± 73 kg) fed corn residues were placed in a 6 × 6 Latin square to evaluate predictions of diet composition from ruminally collected diet samples. After complete ruminal evacuation, cows were fed 1-kg meals (DM-basis) containing different combinations of cornstalk and leaf and husk (LH) residues in ratios of 0:100,...
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Grazing annual cool-season forages after oat grain harvest in South Dakota may allow an opportunity to increase efficient use of tillable land. However, data are limited regarding effects of stocking density on diet selection, nutrient digestion, performance, and N retention by cattle grazing annual cool-season forage. Heifers were blocked by initi...
Article
Cattle grazing wheat pasture in the southern Great Plains are sometimes fed an energy supplement; however, the benefits of supplementation on nutrient balance, energy metabolism, and greenhouse gas emissions have not been elucidated. Therefore, we used 10 British crossbred steers (206 ± 10.7 kg initial BW) in a respiration calorimetry study to eval...
Article
Cattle grazing wheat pasture in the southern Great Plains are sometimes fed an energy supplement; however, the benefits of supplementation on nutrient balance, energy metabolism, and greenhouse gas emissions have not been elucidated. Therefore, we used 10 British crossbred steers (206 ± 10.7 kg initial BW) in a respiration calorimetry study to eval...
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Full-text available
Condensed tannins (CT) may decrease greenhouse gas emissions and alter the site of N excreted by ruminants. We evaluated the effect of top-dressing a steam-flaked corn–based finishing diet (14.4% CP and NEg 1.47 Mcal/kg) for beef cattle with a commercially available CT extract at 3 levels (0, 0.5, and 1.0% of diet, DM basis). Angus-crossbred steers...
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Angus × Hereford calves (n = 430; initial BW = 230 ± 32 kg) were stratified by sex, age, and BW and assigned randomly to receive 0, 1, 2, or 3 doses of modified-live respiratory disease (BRD) vaccine before feedlot placement (0X, 1X, 2X, or 3X, respectively). Calves from 2 sources were weaned 29 d before feedlot placement and placed in a weaning fa...
Article
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Angus × Hereford beef heifers and steers (n = 460; initial BW = 225 ± 35 kg) were randomly allocated to 1 of 3 ranch-of-origin weaning methods 28 d in duration: drylot weaning + dam separation (D), pasture weaning + fence-line contact with dams (PF), and pasture weaning + fence-line contact with dams + supplemental feed delivered in a bunk (PF+S)....
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Angus × Hereford calves (n = 409; initial BW = 163 ± 31 kg) were weaned early (~130 d of age) and assigned randomly to treatments that corresponded to a length of time (d) between separation from their dam and transport to a feedlot: 0 (i.e., nonweaned), 15, 30, 45, or 60 d. Weaning date varied by treatment; transport occurred on a common date and...
Article
Six duodenally and ileally cannulated steers were used in 3 sequential studies to measure 1) basal nutrient flows from a soybean hull-based diet, 2) small intestinal digestibility of raw cornstarch continuously infused into the duodenum, and 3) responses of small intestinal starch digestion to duodenal infusion of 200 or 400 g/d casein. Our objecti...
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Harvested forages become scarce and expensive during times of drought; moreover, grains typically have lesser unit cost of energy than forages. Our objective was to evaluate the performance and efficiency of light-weight, early-weaned beef calves program fed a dry-rolled sorghum-based diet (15.6% CP, 1.20 Mcal NEg/kg) with intake levels adjusted to...
Article
Effects of supplemental glucose and degradable intake protein on nutrient digestion and urea kinetics in steers (Bos taurus) given ad libitum access to prairie hay (4.7% CP) were quantified. Six ruminally and duodenally cannulated steers (initial BW 391 kg) were used in a 4 × 4 Latin square with 2 extra steers. Treatments were arranged as a 2 × 2 f...
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Full-text available
Effects of supplemental energy sources on nutrient digestion and urea kinetics at 2 levels of degradable intake protein were evaluated in cattle (Bos taurus). Six ruminally and duodenally cannulated steers (208 ± 17 kg) were used in a 6 × 6 Latin square with treatments arranged as a 3 × 2 factorial. Energy treatments included a control, 600 g gluco...
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Beef Cattle Research, 2011 is known as Cattlemen’s Day, 2011 Prepartum supplementation of spring-calving beef cows is a vital part of cow-calf enterprises, often affecting subsequent reproductive success. Most research in the area of prepartum supplementation has focused on provision of either energy or protein; only modest attention has been given...
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Full-text available
Maximizing utilization of native rangeland is an important aspect of the cow/calf phase of beef production. Native rangeland is often of poor quality (less than 7% crude protein). Protein content of the rangeland is important because nitrogen is a key growth factor used by ruminal microbes. Without adequate nitrogen, the ruminal ecosystem will not...
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Full-text available
Previous research at Kansas State University has shown that providing supplemental energy when protein is deficient will cause a decrease in digestion of low-quality forage. Our project examined the effects of supplemental glucose on low-quality forage intake and digestion. Urea recycling is a mechanism by which cattle preserve nitrogen when faced...

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