- Fall 1995 "Update" Newsletter Article -


Elephant-sized grass
Animal and Soil science specialists team up in study


From CATI Publication #951001
Copyright © 1995. All rights reserved.


You won't likely see any pachyderms foraging there. But if you scan the pasture area north of the beef cattle barns at the university farm, you might glimpse some steers grazing the first-ever stand of elephant grass at California State University, Fresno.

The production trial is seen by researchers here as offering the potential for agricultural advances on two fronts: 1) providing an alternative high-quality feed for cattle and other animals; and 2) helping to reduce salt accumulation in the soil in areas such as the western San Joaquin Valley.

Elephant grass, also known as Napier grass and by its botanical species name Pennisetum, is relied on in many parts of the world as a natural forage plant for cattle. It typically grows as a perennial in tropical areas of South America, Asia and Africa, explained research consultant Morton Rothberg, who is overseeing trial production of the crop locally for the Center for Irrigation Technology.

Since elephant grass is not native to North America, production here is scarce. Currently it is grown in some parts of Florida, and now at Fresno State, Rothberg said.

Its appearance contrasts sharply from that of Bermuda pasture grass or alfalfa. It grows in clumps, spreading from a single stalk, or stool, to a base of stalks two or three feet wide. New stalks sprout from underground "eyes" at the base of each plant. They grow to half an inch or more in thickness at the base, fan out into flat two-inch-wide leaves which reach heights of up to five feet.

Cattle consumed the grass readily when put out to pasture in the test plot earlier this summer, proving the plant is at least palatable, Rothberg said. That was a first key finding in a project which could extend several years if results continue to be positive.

Why elephant grass rather than alfalfa? "It has an extremely high protein content," Rothberg said. Analysis showed that dry weight matter of elephant grass harvested from the Fresno State plot at three weeks of age contained more than 25 percent protein. That compares to an average of 20 percent for alfalfa, he said.

It also contained total digestible nutrients of 65 percent, compared to 60 percent for alfalfa.

The trial shows elephant grass grows well in this area. Harvested portions of the one-acre experimental plot have shown "it has been equal to or greater than alfalfa in yield. And that's a conservative statement," Rothberg said. Unlike alfalfa, the elephant grass was fertilized with nitrogen, so there are cost inputs and other factors to be considered when comparing the results from the initial trials, Rothberg said.

In addition to its potential as a cattle feed, elephant grass may prove to be more salt tolerant than alfalfa. Initial greenhouse screenings, as well as growth trials on the San Joaquin Valley's West Side showed it could tolerate irrigation water with salt content of up to eight decisiemens per meter.

"This plant was surviving when most other plants would die," Rothberg noted.

Lead faculty investigator for the elephant grass project is Professor Randy Perry from the Department of Animal Science and Agricultural Education. Perry has teamed with CIT in other projects to explore alternative grasses that may tolerate the high-salt content of West-Side soils and still serve as a nutritious cattle feed.

In a later part of this study, Perry will measure dry matter digestibility and weight gain in cattle supplemented with elephant grass.

The original cuttings brought into the United States for these trials were from Brazil, where Rothberg lived and operated a agricultural consulting business for 25 years. The cuttings had to be cleared by U.S. Customs. The plant has no known vulnerabilities to pests or pathogens, Rothberg said.

There are still unknowns regarding the production and use of elephant grass. It must be planted using cuttings rather than seed. And there is little information on its performance when baled. In most cases, elephant grass is chopped and fed as part of a green silage mix, Rothberg said.

The study is being supported by the California Agricultural Technology Institute. For more information, Rothberg can be contacted through CIT at (209) 278-2066.

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