Dangerous Pasture and Hay Crops
An Article by Pam Hunter
What you should know
about what your pastured animals eat everyday!Things you should know about
the grasses and plants in your pasture. Don't Miss our NEW page about
Tansy Ragwort
control!
Hunter's Pony Farm offers
this information as a service to our readers, we are not veterinarians, and
take no responsibility for errors or consequences of using this information.
If you are concerned about your animal, you should consult a licensed
veterinarian immediately.
Hay, Forage, Feed
FROM OUR DIRECTORY:
Have you ever wanted to know the poisonous or toxic
plants that could be growing in your pasture? With the news of foals dying
from the possible injestion of cherry leaves it is fresh in our minds now
to consider what our own horses may be exposed to in the pasture. Use the
lists below to learn more about the plants that may be growing in your grass!
What about the things you hear about bugs in hay?
Well, this is the place to find out about those problems...
ones faced not just by horse owners, but farmers,
cattle and dairy farms, goat keepers, hay growers and others. Some of these
plants are even poisonous to you and me! So read on, then check your pasture!
There are a few topics I want to cover here:
Nitrate poisoning occurs in humans, cattle, goats, horses, dogs, birds, sheep
and swine to a lesser degree.
The nitrate ion itself is relatively non toxic, it is when the nitrate is
broken down in the digestive system that the trouble occurs.
Nitrate becomes nitrite which becomes ammonia, which
becomes a protein. It is the nitrite phase in the stomach(s) where some of
the nitrite can enter the bloodstream where it changes into a chemical that
reduces the bloods ability to carry oxygen.
Oxygen starvation of the tissues occurs, along with a different process in
which Prussic acid causes death of the tissues.
Nitrate poisoning happens when animals eat grass, hay, or drink water that
contain large amounts of the chemical. This can come from plants, or from
fertilizers used for farming.
Nitrates occur in most plants and in water, but sometimes the levels get
so high as to become toxic. Grazing animals are usually poisoned by forage
and hay. Nitrate consumption of as little as 0.05% of the animal's body weight
may be lethal. Problems occur most often during cool temperatures, cloudy
days or drought; also where heavy use of nitrate fertilizers occur. Nitrate
formation increases when soil temperatures are 80 - 90 degrees. Low light
(cloudy days) and night time causes nitrates to build up in plants, it is
dispersed when
sunlight hits the plants. The accumulation of nitrates in plants is a natural
process. The plant gathers nitrogen through its root system and then stores
it as nitrate in the stems. This nitrogen is later converted to protein in
the leaves.
Horses can tolerate up to 0.50% nitrate in their total dry matter diet. A
rule of thumb is to select hay for horses that contains no more than 0.65%
nitrate ion on a dry matter basis.
Poisoning happens quickly, animals may be found dead before symptoms are
noticed. Here is what to look for:
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Animal stays out of herd
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may collapse, fall in their tracks
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weakness
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unsteady gait
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shallow and rapid breathing
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rapid pulse
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diarrhea
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frequent urination
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frothing at the mouth
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coma
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death accompanied by muscular reflex movements
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white of eye, tongue, lips may have a blue-brown discoloration
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blood is chocolate brown in color
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pregnant animals may abort
Other issues include animals ingesting plants that are "borderline" in toxicity
causing abortion, reduced milk flow, lower weight gains, vitamin A deficiency.
Plants to watch out for:
Field Crops
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alfalfa
-
millet
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soy bean
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barley
-
oats
-
soy bean
-
corn
-
rape
-
sudan
-
fescue
-
rye
-
wheat
|
Vegetables
-
beets
-
lettuce
-
spinach
-
celery
-
mangles
-
squash
-
cucumbers
-
parsnips
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swiss chard
-
kale
-
radishes
-
turnips
|
Weeds
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bindweed
-
elderberry
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Russian thistle
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blue-green algae
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fiddleneck
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smartweed
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bull thistle
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goldenrod
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stinging nettle
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burdock
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lambsquarter
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sunflower
-
Canadian thistle
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nightshades
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velvetweed
-
carelessweed
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ragweed
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whitecockle
|
Other plants may have toxic levels under certain conditions.
Management Practices
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Feeding rations high in carbohydrates will reduce and some times prevent
losses from nitrate poisoning.
-
Control weeds that accumulate nitrates. Freshly sprayed plants may become
more palatable, so defer grazing of sprayed areas.
-
During periods of cool or cloudy weather. avoid grazing a suspect area if
possible. During periods of sunlight allow animals to eat large quantities
of dry forage and then graze the area.
-
Test the nitrate content of forage when in doubt.
-
Distinguish nitrate poisoning from prussic acid poisoning or grass tetany,
so the appropriate treatment may be administered.
OAT HAY MOISTENED WITH WATER can convert nitrates to nitrites in a short
time.
Guide
B-807,
Christopher D. Allison, Extension Range Management Specialist
College of Agriculture and Home Economics, New Mexico State University
http://www.cahe.nmsu.edu/pubs/_b/b-807.html
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Sudan Grass
(sorghum) including Improved Varieties
Members of the Sorghum family contain dhurrin, a glucoside that breaks down
to release hydrocyanic acid also known as prussic acid. A sudden disruption
of growth such as frost, drought or cutting, causes prussic acid to be released
inside the plant at a more rapid rate. High prussic acid levels may be lethal
to cattle and horses. Prussic acid will breakdown in one to two weeks, so
material made into hay or silage is safe to use after curing.
Nutritional Concerns and Animal Health Hazards
Prussic acid poisoning is a concern in feeding Sorghum, Sudan grass, or
Sorghum-Sudan grass hybrids. In the stomach, these compounds are converted
into prussic acid, which is easily absorbed into the blood. High blood levels
of prussic acid interfere with respiration and cattle can soon die from
respiratory paralysis. Horses should not be allowed to graze these plants
as they may develop cystitis syndrome. This condition looks like colic with
accompanying bloody urine and can be fatal to horses. Affected animals may
show a staggering gait and urine dribbling. Pregnant mares may abort. There
is no treatment for this poisoning and poor prognosis of recovery.
Nitrate poisoning and formation of toxic silo gas can be a problem with
Sorghum-Sudan grass. High nitrate levels are only a problem under abnormal
growing conditions such as:
-
High nitrogen fertilization caused by heavy fertilizer or manure applications
or following legume plow down.
-
Prolonged drought followed by rain.
-
Any condition which kills the leaves while the roots and stems remain active
will initiate accumulation of nitrates (frost, hail, grazing and
trampling, or sometimes drought and overcast weather).
If you suspect high nitrates in the forage, have it tested .
For a detailed and scientific discussion of Sorghums, click the link below.
This Factsheet was authored by:
Beth Wheeler, Dairy Nutrition Specialist, OMAFRA, Kemptville.
Joan McKinlay, Soil and Crop Specialist, OMAFRA, Markdale.
For more information...Joan McKinlay at jmckinla@omafra.gov.on.ca
http://www.gov.on.ca/OMAFRA/english/crops/facts/98-043.htm
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BLISTER BEETLES
IN ALFALFA HAY
Blister Beetles Epicautaspp., Meloidae, COLEOPTERA
DESCRIPTION (several species)
-
Adult
-
Blister beetles are slender insects 12 to 19 mm long. They have prominent
heads and may be black with yellow margins or black and yellow striped.
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Egg
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The yellow cylindrical eggs are 1.3 to 1.8 mm long.
-
Larva
-
Each of the seven larval instars differ in size, shape and color. They can
be 2.5 to 13 mm long, slender to plump, and white to yellow or brown. All
instars have three pairs of short ventral legs and 12 body segments, excluding
the head.
-
Pupa
-
The white, 10-mm-long pupae darken gradually beginning with the eyes.
BIOLOGY
-
Distribution
-
Blister beetles are found throughout the continental U.S. and agricultural
areas of Canada. Although fairly common in North Carolina, they are infrequently
pests of importance.
-
Host Plants
-
Blister beetles have a wide host range. Important vegetable hosts include
potato, tomato, melon, eggplant, sweet potato, bean, pea, cowpea, pumpkin,
onion, spinach, beet, carrot, pepper, radish, corn, and cabbage.
The beetles feed on alfalfa and soybean foliage. The real problem with blister
beetles is their toxicity to livestock, especially horses, when accidentally
eaten in feed. The beetles produce cantharidin, an irritant that causes painful
blistering when the insects are handled. The cantharidin remains in the beetle's
body even after it dies. That becomes a problem when alfalfa is swathed,
during which dead blister beetles can be incorporated into the hay as it
is made. Thus, livestock can accidentally consume whole beetles or their
squashed remains when the hay is fed.
Horses are especially susceptible to blister beetle poisoning. Consumption
of 25 to 300 beetles can kill a mature horse. Cattle and sheep are much
less susceptible, but blister beetles will reduce digestibility of hay and
may throw cattle off feed. Also, cantharidin is a stable compound that withstands
decomposition even when it is dried or heated; the hay will keep its toxicity
in storage.
Symptoms that include:
-
colic
-
blisters on the tongue and in the mouth
-
blood or intestinal lining discharge in stools
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problems with urination
-
bloody discharge in urine
-
straining
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elevated temperature
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depression
-
increased heart and respiratory rates
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dehydration
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sweating
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diarrhea
Because the toxin is absorbed and then excreted with the urine, severe
inflammation of the urinary tract is a common sign of poisoning. Death may
occur within 24 hours, and treatment with mineral oil by stomach tube is
recommended but not always very effective. If blister beetle poisoning is
suspected, contact a veterinarian immediately.
What can be done to avoid blister beetle problems?
-
Identify the species of blister beetles.
-
Grow your own alfalfa and maintain complete control over management practices,
if possible.
-
Because blister beetle populations are not large until mid- to late summer,
set aside first and often second cutting hay for use
in feeding horses. Or consider purchasing first cutting hay from neighbors
to use as horse feed.
-
Watch for beetles as you cut hay. Some species "swarm" in front of the harvester.
Stop and let the beetles disperse before continuing.
-
Crimping and other conditioning increases the number of beetles that remain
in the swath prior to baling. If possible, try to cut the alfalfa and put
in swaths that can be straddled by the tractor to avoid crushing beetles
in the windrow.
-
Eliminate weeds and cut the alfalfa before it reaches advanced bloom stages.
Flowering plants attract the beetles that feed on alfalfa and weed pollen.
-
Insecticide treatments are available but must be applied with preharvest
intervals in mind. If you treat with insecticides, be sure to allow enough
time so that dying beetles fall out of the canopy to the ground where they
burrow into the soil. Do not treat fields at peak bloom to avoid bee kills
and losses to other beneficial species.
Because the larvae of many blister beetles in the genus Epicauta eat only
grasshopper egg pods, these blister beetles are often associated with grasshopper
outbreaks. Alfalfa grown near rangeland has a greater likelihood of blister
beetle infestation.
Blister beetles are especially attracted to alfalfa and weeds (e.g., goldenrod)
during bloom.
Guidelines for insecticide use in alfalfa are published annually in the High
Plains Integrated Pest Management Guide. To purchase a copy, call the Colorado
State University Cooperative Extension Resource Center, (970) 491-6198.
Insecticides are hazardous to pollinators, especially honey bees. Read,
understand and follow all label directions, including pollinator protection
statements.
-
Excerpted From:
-
Placed on Web Friday, January 21, 2000.
© Colorado State University Cooperative Extension. 1995-1999.
Contact Cooperative Extension Web Manager
Home Page:
www.colostate.edu/Depts/CoopExt/
http://www.colostate.edu/depts/CoopExt/PUBS/INSECT/05524.html
Issued in furtherance of Cooperative Extension work, Acts of May 8 and June
30, 1914, in cooperation with the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Milan A.
Rewerts, director of Cooperative Extension, Colorado State University, Fort
Collins, Colorado. Cooperative Extension programs are available to all without
discrimination. No endorsement of products mentioned is intended nor is criticism
implied of products not mentioned.
http://www.ent.iastate.edu/ipm/icm/1998/9-14-1998/blisterb.html
Read
an Article by Donald Stotts about Blister Beetles
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Festuca
arundinacea (grass family)
TOXICITY RATING: Moderate to high, depending upon individual circumstance.
ANIMALS AFFECTED: Horses, cattle, possibly other ruminants.
DANGEROUS PARTS OF THE PLANT: Seed head, stem and leaf sheath.
CLASS OF SIGNS: Reproductive problems, "poor doers", lameness, dry gangrene,
fever, death.
PLANT DESCRIPTION: This grass (fig. 15), often cultivated in wet pastures
for forage or for turf, is a perennial, 3 to 4 foot tall clump grass with
medium-wide leaves that are rough-ribbed on top. It has no rootstocks (rhizomes).
The heads are open and many-branched. Escaped plants may be found along roadsides
and in waste areas.
SIGNS: Toxicity is the result of an endophytic ("inside the plant") fungus,
Acremonium coenophialum, which is believed to enable the grass to
be more hardy and outcompete other grass species. The grass itself is not
toxic. The fungus is passed in the seed, and is not transmitted directly
from plant to plant.
In horses, pregnant mares are most at risk when eating fescue, since the
alkaloids produced by the fungus inhibit prolactin release. Mares will have
an increased risk of prolonged gestation, abortion, stillbirth, dystocia
(difficult birth), foal mortality, retained or thickened placenta, no milk,
and mare death (in foaling, or from a retained placenta).
Additional note: Fescue can accumulate nitrates under conditions of
overfertilization (see the section on oats for more information on nitrate
toxicosis).
FIRST AID: There is only supportive and symptomatic treatment once signs
appear. A veterinarian can advise on treatment of more severely affected
animals. Pregnant mares will be likely to need assistance when foaling and
in the post-foaling period. Foals that survive will require supplemental
colostrum. Management and prevention are the best means to minimize losses.
SAFETY IN PREPARED FEEDS: The toxin remains active in hay.
PREVENTION: Fungicides do not work, so animal and pasture management are
the only viable alternatives. Pastures can be tested for the presence and
degree of fungal contamination, and reseeding may be needed. If reseeding
the pasture is not an option, keeping the pasture short will prevent seed
formation. Feeding other forages, such as other warm season grasses or legumes,
will be of benefit. Fescue pastures can also be diluted with legume planting
(red or white clover). Heavy fertilization may make the problem worse, especially
in cattle. If fescue has to be used for mares, at least avoid feeding fescue
hay or pasture during the last 30 to 60 days of gestation to minimize problems.
Endophyte-free strains of fescue exist, although they do not grow as well
as tall fescue with endophyte.
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Sorghum
halepense (grass family)
TOXICITY RATING: Moderate to high.
ANIMALS AFFECTED: All types, especially ruminants.
DANGEROUS PARTS OF PLANTS: Leaves and stems, especially young plants.
CLASS OF SIGNS: Breathing problems, staggering, severe anxiety, convulsions,
coma, death (may be very sudden).
PLANT DESCRIPTION: Johnsongrass , a coarse perennial grass, produces large,
scaly rootstocks and grows in dense stands up to 6 feet high. Seed heads
are large and loose. This plant grows commonly in the fields, fencerows,
and ditch banks of the southern part of the US and is rapidly spreading
northward. Once grown for dike stabilization or for hay, it is now classified
as a "noxious" weed.
SIGNS: The toxic signs resulting from ingestion of Johnsongrass are due to
the presence of cyanide in the leaves and stems. This toxicity is identical
to that resulting from the ingestion of wilted or damaged cherry leaves.
In normal, healthy Johnsongrass plants, the levels of free cyanide are low,
and the plant can be consumed safely. Other members of this grass genus have
been bred as grain or forage plants (milo, Sudan grass, etc.) and also have
the potential to produce cyanide, although not as much as Johnsongrass. The
young shoots are the most dangerous, and when wilted, trampled, herbicide
treated or frost damaged, a great deal of free cyanide is liberated in the
leaves. Upon ingestion, the animals quickly develop signs related to cyanide
poisoning. Mature plants have much lower toxicity, and well-cured hay is
relatively safe for consumption.
This article may be reprinted on your web site if you include this
entire paragraph when copying it to your site. Copyright 2004, Pam Hunter,
Hunter's Pony Farm
http://www.huntersponyfarm.com
Visit HPF for more information about horses and barn management
http://www.barn-management.com
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