N.A. Krueger
University of Florida
8 Papers
2 Citations
N.A. Krueger is an academic researcher from University of Florida. The author has contributed to research in topics: Fibrolytic bacterium & Neutral Detergent Fiber. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 8 publications.
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Papers
The Influence of Treatment with Dual Purpose Bacterial Inoculants or Soluble Carbohydrates on the Fermentation and Aerobic Stability of Bermudagrass
TL;DR: BB and molasses treatments improved the digestibility and fermentation of bermudagrass and produced higher quality silages that were stable for 6.9 d, suggesting that a clostridial fermentation had occurred.
108
Effect of method of applying fibrolytic enzymes or ammonia to Bermudagrass hay on feed intake, digestion, and growth of beef steers
N.A. Krueger,Adegbola T. Adesogan,C.R. Staples,W. K. Krueger,Sam Churl Kim,Ramon C. Littell,Lynn E. Sollenberger +6 more
TL;DR: Application at cutting was the most promising method of enzyme treatment, and this treatment was almost as effective as ammonia for enhancing forage quality.
86
Effect of Fibrolytic Enzymes on the Fermentation Characteristics, Aerobic Stability, and Digestibility of Bermudagrass Silage
TL;DR: Results show that when applied at ensiling, certain fibrolytic enzymes (particularly Promote) can improve the digestibility, fermentation, and aerobic stability of bermudagrass silage.
84
Nutritional characterization of Mucuna pruriens: 3. Effect of replacing soybean meal with Mucuna on intake, digestibility, N balance and microbial protein synthesis in sheep
S.K. Chikagwa-Malunga,Adegbola T. Adesogan,Nancy J. Szabo,Ramon C. Littell,S.C. Phatak,Sam Churl Kim,Kathy G. Arriola,C.M. Huisden,D.B. Dean,N.A. Krueger +9 more
TL;DR: Mucuna pruriens seeds have relatively high crude protein concentrations, but little is known about their potential to replace commonly used CP supplements in ruminant rations.
32
•Journal Article
Effect of Treatment with Fibrolytic Enzymes or Ammonia on the Nutritive Value of Guineagrass (Panicun maximum) Hay
TL;DR: Ammoniation increased CP concentration and in vitro DM and NDF digestibility, therefore ammoniation was the only treatment that increased the nutritive value of guineagrass hays and shows that guineAGrass quality decreases as the duration between harvests increases.
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