Green Forage Cut and Fed Fresh — Correct Term
Green forages that are cut and fed in fresh condition to the animals in their stall is known as:
- Haylage
- Silage
- Green chop and Soilage (Both) — Correct Answer
- Wastelage
Correct Answer: Green chop and Soilage (Both)
Green forages cut and fed fresh directly to animals in their stall are called both Green chop and Soilage. These are essentially the same concept — zero storage; the animal receives maximally fresh feed.
Soilage vs Silage
- Soilage: Pasture/fodder cut and fed green immediately in the stall — NO fermentation, NO storage. Maximum vitamin retention.
- Silage: Green fodder packed into silos under anaerobic conditions — fermentation occurs over weeks, creating lactic acid preservation.
Advantages of Soilage/Green Chop
- Maximum nutritive value preserved (no wilting, no fermentation losses)
- High Vitamin A (carotene) content
- Reduces wastage compared to field grazing
Disadvantage
Labour-intensive — requires daily cutting and transport. Cannot be stored for out-of-season use.
📚 About this Topic — Animal Nutrition
This multiple choice question is from Animal Nutrition, Animal Refresher. It has 4 options with a detailed explanation of the correct answer. Practice more MCQs from Animal Nutrition to strengthen your preparation.