Straw
Inadequate production of green fodder in the country compelled the farmers to utilize dry roughages as livestock feed particularly for the ruminants. In one estimate, it has been found that in the country, there are about 310 million tones of these dry roughages produced annually. Among these straw, bhusa, karbi and hay are noteworthy. In all developed countries, feeding of high quality hay is in practice. Due to unavailability of high quality dry roughages, straw, bhusa and karbi form the major bulk of livestock feed in India. Obviously, feeding of inferior quality dry roughage is reflected in low productivity of animals.
Farmers utilize these poor quality dry roughages as energy feed, which unfortunately varies between 40-50% in digestible energy. Voluntary intake of animals is so low that it is barely sufficient to yield adequate energy to meet their maintenance needs. For some roughages, more energy are spent by the animal in chewing and digesting the roughages than what the animal derives from the dry roughages.
The poor nutritive value of these roughages may be attributed to the following facts:
1. The digestibility of straw is limited due to the formation of strong physical and/ or chemical bonds between lignin and the structural polysaccharides (hemicellulose and cellulose). Although cellulose by itself has a highly ordered crystalline structure, it has very strong association with lignin with the result that even most the potent cellulosic enzymes can not have easy access to the cellulose unless the bondage between lignin and cellulose is broken. The lignin thus acts as a barrier in the efficient utilization of cellulosic plant materials even as a source of energy. Whether, the inhibitory mechanism involves the presence of ligno-cellulosic or ligno-hemicellulosic chemical bonds or the three dimensional macromolecular lignin network by itself acts as a protective barrier in the efficient utilization of cellulose as a source of energy is yet fully understood and established
2. Crystalline structure of cellulose is also responsible for low digestibility of cellulose
3. Highly deficient in other nutrients like minerals, vitamins, fatty acids and in proteins. The minimum crude protein requirement for efficient lignocellulose breakdown of roughages fed as the sole diet is claimed to be from 3.8-5.0%
4. High silica content of straws known to depress organic matter digestibility
5. Due to dustiness of straw, the total intake is markedly affected