The following was released by Dr. Calvin Trostle today:
Texas A&M AgriLife “Texas Row Crops
Newsletter”
Dr. Calvin
Trostle, Extension Agronomy, TAMU Dept. of Soil & Crop Sciences, Lubbock,
(806) 746-6101, ctrostle@ag.tamu.edu;
November 3,
2021
A short version of
this item originally appeared in the “Sorghum Insider,” an online newsletter of
the Texas Grain Sorghum Association.
Prussic Acid and Nitrate in Forages,
Especially Sorghums
Prussic Acid (Cyanide)
I have received several calls from growers in the past
three weeks about prussic acid and nitrate accumulation in forages. These inquiries are routine in the fall
starting in mid-October in the Texas High Plains as the first heavy frosts and
freezes occur. Then questions progress
downstate as low temperatures reach further into Texas.
Prussic acid becomes an
issue at the first heavy frost/light freeze on anything in the sorghum
family. This includes grain sorghum,
sorghum/sudan, forage sorghum, redtop cane, hegari, sudangrass, and yes, even
Johnsongrass. This releases plant compounds due to cell rupture that
frees prussic acid, or cyanide (HCN). Properly cured (dried) forages
should not have an issue with prussic acid. Prussic acid is mostly in the
leaves, but larger stalks that can’t dissipate the prussic acid as quickly take
more time to dry.
Prussic acid can also be an issue in the new fresh
growth at the base of the plant from a grain sorghum field near and after
harvest (Figs. 1A-B). This can also
occur from the base of sorghum/sudans for forage or hay. Also, the least-known
potential issue with grazed sorghum/sudans, Johnsongrass, etc. is in the
summer. Under drought conditions when
the sorghum/sudan is struggling to grow, rains come, and the fresh growth can
be hot.
The general advice on prussic acid is to avoid grazing
for a minimum of seven days after a freeze event.
Is prussic acid that big a deal? I have heard cattle can handle it.
I have heard this too.
You will not find this thinking in any state Extension literature. Here is the gist of this statement, which has
perplexed me for 20+ years: When cattle
graze a forage that has prussic acid potential—that is, there is not at the
moment prussic acid but ‘cyanogenic glucosides’ (dhurri) reside in the plant
tissue—the process of mastication (chewing) by ruminants releases some of these
compounds to form prussic acid. This
mimics the results of frost/freeze and prussic acid forms. At low levels, as toxic as this cyanide (or
HCN, prussic acid) is, it is not a major health issue. However, when a heavy frost/freeze occurs large
amounts of prussic acid are potentially released at once. These are in turn the levels that endanger
animal health.
Figures 1A-B. Basal tiller regrowth in grain sorghum near
harvest (A) and after harvest and mowing (B) of stalks. Young regrowth is susceptible to prussic acid
development without a frost or freeze.
Cattle released into a field with regrowth (A) are drawn to this fresh
tender regrowth thus at higher risk.
I may not reflect this scenario
accurately, but this was the common statement of Dr. Ted McCollum, former Texas
A&M AgriLife Extension beef cattle specialist, Amarillo. I was long perplexed by Dr. McCollum’s
statement because it is a fact: animals
die from prussic acid poisoning.
Leonard Lauriault, long-time New Mexico State University
forage agronomist, Tucumcari, generally agrees with Dr. McCollum’s thinking—to
a point. That point is higher levels of
prussic acid. See more from Mr.
Lauriault below with regard to sampling for prussic acid. For some additional explanation of this angle
on prussic acid see the United Sorghum Checkoff Program document at the end.
The bottom line with prussic acid remains: it IS a threat to animal health. There is no clear-cut view on how much
prussic acid is safe. In the past some
labs and animal scientists suggested prussic acid <200 ppm is probably OK to
feed. But due to the inaccurate nature
of sampling, transporting, and testing prussic acid the results of a prussic
acid test have a significant level of uncertainty. Most labs now report the presence of
prussic acid, and let you decide how to manage your crop or hay.
Does hybrid pearl millet develop prussic acid?
In general, no. Some
literature suggests there is a very low potential for accumulation. However, in practice this is not the
case. Years ago encountered a lab report
that claimed prussic acid was high in a millet sample. The lab was dismissive of the well-known fact
of this low potential in hybrid pearl millet.
“Now we know,” they said. The
sample should have been retested. Millet
is not a member of the sorghum family and you and people you might sell millet
hay to can assume that prussic acid is not an animal health issue.
Nitrate in Sorghums and Other Forages
Nitrate accumulates in
the bottom of the plant when they are not growing. Plants are still accumulating—but not
assimilating—the N into plant proteins or other components. This nitrate concentrates in the bottom (up to
12 inches or so) the stalk. When you mow
hay, the nitrate level is fixed. It does
not dissipate. When nitrate is high in a
forage (near 1.0% and higher) for healthy animals, it can be blended with low
nitrate forage. Or at hay harvest one
can raise the cutter bar (if a swather) a few inches. This reduces yields but leaves a significant
amount of nitrate in the field. Cattle
can develop some tolerance to nitrate in forages over time.
Unlike prussic acid toxicity, nitrate issues are not
unique to sorghum family forages.
Other crops like corn, several small grains, hybrid pearl millet and several
weeds (including pigweed/carelessweed/Palmer ameranth) also have potential
nitrate issues. Nitrate poisoning from
irrigated sorghum forages is rare. These
plants are actively growing and assimilating uptake nitrate into plant
structures.
The primary Texas A&M AgriLife document “Nitrate and
Prussic Acid in Forages” is at https://agrilifeextension.tamu.edu/library/ranching/nitrates-and-prussic-acid-in-forages/ (Fig. 2).
This document discusses both prussic acid and nitrate, what field
environmental and weather conditions can lead to a concern, and how to
recognize them.
Testing for Prussic Acid and Nitrate in Forages
For prussic acid testing, I
especially recommend the Texas Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Lab, https://tvmdl.tamu.edu/ This lab’s mandate is animal health. That includes what animals eat. I believe they have the best understanding of
how to properly sample, transport, and submit samples for prussic acid poison
testing. This is important because
sampling, transport, and timing can significantly impact measured values. See “Cyanide and Nitrate in Forage” (Fig. 3) at
https://tvmdl.tamu.edu/wp-content/uploads/2018/03/B.014_0519.pdf for sampling and
shipping guidelines.
Among
the four TVMDL locations only the College Station lab performs the prussic
acid test. Do not send your samples
to Canyon, Center, or Gonzales. They
will notify you to recollect a sample to send to College Station.
If it is nitrate only you need you can have that
done any regional lab including the Texas A&M AgriLife soil, water, and
forage lab in College Station. This test
is straightforward and does not have the sampling and transport issues that
prussic acid does.
For prussic acid
samples you should collect samples mid-afternoon and drop locally and request
overnight shipping for morning delivery.
Samples to TVMDL will be run early afternoon the next day. Do not ship a
sample on Friday. It won’t run until
Monday. If you are close to
College Station you can drive your sample to the lab.
TVMDL’s
instructions in the above guide are specific to each of prussic acid and
nitrate:
·
Prussic
acid--they prefer to test leaves only (from 8 to 15 stalks); see specific instructions
if sampling standing forage or baled hay.
The container you ship in is important.
·
Nitrate—they
prefer to test only the base of the stalk (from 8 to 15 stalks)
·
Test
both prussic and nitrate from the same sample?—TVMDL will use the leaves for
prussic acid, the rest of the plant for nitrate (this could give a lower value
of nitrate)
Bottom
Line—Knowing how to best protect animal health
The
above documents provide much more detail on prussic acid and nitrate in
forages. Leonard Lauriault at
NMSU-Tucumcari notes a grower actually might not need a prussic acid test. Why? “If
the conditions are right for elevated and risky prussic acid potential from a
frost or freeze, you must assume that prussic acid is present.” You can’t wait for a test. The cattle have to come off any sorghum
family forage immediately. And
you know you have to wait at least seven days before you could graze again. So maybe a test helps you feel better about
your situation.
A case study—Snyder, TX, 2002
Prussic acid vs. nitrate and how these compounds occur can be
confusing. About 2002 I was called to look
into a situation near Snyder that resulted in 31 dead dairy replacement
heifers. The veterinarian stated tests
showed there was prussic acid in the rumen (was that from mastication only?). But the sorghum/sudan was very dry when baled
according to the farmer. In fact, it
remained in the windrow an extra 5 days to dry off the moisture from a shower. This did not make sense—Any prussic acid
should have dissipated. I core
sampled the bales with a Penn State hay sampler wondering if just possibly I
could find traces of prussic acid in the bale.
No prussic acid rather the samples were 0.7% and 1.2% nitrate. After more questions, I learned from the
farmer there was a heavy infestation of pigweed on the north end of the
field. Pigweed is a notorious
accumulator of nitrate! One of those
bales must have been fed Saturday morning.
The heifers were found dead Sunday afternoon.
For additional reading—United Sorghum Checkoff Program Info./Dr.
Brent Bean
USCP has a
concise document that also summarizes well some complexities of prussic acid
and nitrate in forages. Agronomy
director Dr. Brent Bean dealt with these issues frequently during his
distinguished career as Texas A&M Extension agronomist from Amarillo. See the following:
·
Avoiding Prussic Acid (cyanide) and Nitrate
Poisoning in Drought Stressed Sorghum in Livestock
·
https://www.sorghumcheckoff.com/search-results-new?search=prussic&id=893