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Forage
Forage Extension Program
Growing Millet in Montana
By Dennis Cash, MSU Extension
Service (dcash@montana.edu); Duane Johnson, MAES Northwestern
Agricultural Research Center (duanej@montana.edu); David
Wichman, MAES Central Agriculture Research Center (dwichman@montana.edu)
"Several
millets can
produce good forage
yields, and are
useful for emergency
forage or a catch
crop after hailed-out
wheat." |
Acreage of several millet species has increased in
recent years. Millet is a short-term warm-season annual
crop that has excellent drought hardiness. Millet grain
is used for human food products, livestock feed or birdseed.
Several millets can produce good forage yields, and
are useful for emergency forage or a catch crop after
hailed-out wheat. As warm-season species, millets are
sensitive to late spring frosts, so they should be seeded
after soil temperatures are consistently above 65 degrees.
For emergency forage during a drought, millets can out-yield
sudangrass or sorghums. However with good moisture or
under irrigation, other warm-season forages (sudangrass,
sorghum, sorghum X sudangrass hybrids or corn) are superior.
The
primary types of millet are:
-
Proso millet (Panicum miliaceum) is used primarily
for birdseed or livestock feed. Proso millet grows
to about a 30-inch height, and the stems are hollow
and coarse. The leaves and stems are pubescent,
and the seed heads (panicles) are large and lax.
When the seed is threshed, most of the inner hulls
remain attached to the grain. Seed color varies
among varieties, from white, cream, red to brown
or black. For birdseed production, white grain is
preferred, so be sure to contact a marketer before
planting. There are about 80,000 seeds per pound.
Seeding rates of 15 to 30 pounds of pure live seed
per acre are recommended, but due to poor seedling
vigor, higher seeding rates (>25) have been successful.
If grown in wide rows (>24-inch) as a row crop
for grain, seeding rates of 5 pounds are adequate.
Plant at 0.5 to 0.75-inch depth into a firm seedbed.
Depending on variety and growing season, proso millet
requires 70 to 100 days to mature grain. Grain harvest
of proso millet is accomplished by swathing when
the top half of the panicles have mature seed (seed
in lower half will be in the dough stage), followed
by combining. Some varieties of proso millet are:
Abarr, Cerise, Cope, Dawn, Leonard, Minco, Minsum,
Rise, Turghai and “Common”.
-
Foxtail millet (Setaria italica) or Siberian millet
is used primarily as a forage crop. Forage varieties
can be over 40 inches in height, and can be cut
75 to 90 days after seeding. Foxtail millet stems
are slender and leafy, and the heads are dense and
bristly. Seed colors vary from white, yellow, orange,
green and purple. Foxtail millet has about 220,000
seeds per pound, so recommended seeding rates are
4 to 12 pounds of pure live seed per acre, seeded
at 0.5 to 0.75-inch depth. Due to its shallow root
system, foxtail millet is a poor pasture crop –
it should be hayed or windrow-grazed. For optimum
quality, foxtail millet should be cut for hay in
the late boot to early bloom stage. Delayed harvest
can the result in lump jaw or eye injury of livestock
from the bristly heads. Depending on conditions,
hay harvest in Montana might coincide with frost.
It is recommended that hay millet be checked for
nitrate accumulation prior to feeding. Additionally,
over-mature foxtail millet hay can act as a diuretic
to horses if it is the sole roughage source. Varieties
of foxtail millet are: Butte, German, Golden German,
Manta, Sno-Fox, White Wonder and “Common”.
-
Pearl millet (Pennisetum americanum) is grown primarily
for grain production in warmer areas, but can be
used as forage, depending on variety. Most varieties
or hybrids mature require 120 days to maturity,
so these are not suitable for grain production in
Montana. In Colorado, forage types of Pearl millet
can reach 8 to 10-foot heights. For hay production,
seeding rates from 10 to 20 pounds per acre are
recommended.
-
Japanese millet (Echinochloa crusgalli) is grown
primarily for forage in warmer areas.
Very little research has been conducted with millet
in Montana. In early trials, forage yields of other
crops were superior to millet on crop-fallow (Table
1). In recent trials, millet has been tested on both
fallow and re-crop. Because millet is mostly grown as
an emergency forage during drought, performance on re-crop
is a better indication of the potential of millet forage.
In 1998, six millet varieties were tested for forage
production at Moccasin (Table 2). In this trial, the
two foxtail millets produced over two tons per acre,
but the proso millet varieties had acceptable forage
yields. The millet forage had fair levels of protein,
but levels of acid detergent fiber (ADF) were very low
– indicating excellent potential forage digestibility
and energy levels. Forage nitrate concentrations were
well below cautionary levels for feeding. Although no
livestock feeding trails were conducted, these data
indicate that these millets would be acceptable roughages
in Montana. Grain yields ranged from 2 to 1200 pounds
per acre. The pearl millet entry in this trial had poor
forage and grain production.
Table 1. Average dryland millet forage yields (dry
pounds per acre) on crop-fallow in Montana.
| |
1927-1932 |
1970 |
1971 |
| Millet (white) |
1798 |
1954 |
1990 |
| Corn, 85-day |
- |
- |
2194 |
| Corn, >90-day |
3223 |
1850 |
2552 |
| Oat |
2265 |
- |
- |
| Sorghum |
3073 |
- |
- |
| Sorghum x sudangrass |
- |
- |
1153 |
| Sudangrass |
1925 |
- |
- |
Table 2. Millet variety trial at Moccasin, Montana
in 1998. The trial was seeded May 20, forage yields
on August 26 and grain harvest on September 17 (yields
averaged across fallow and re-crop).
| |
Forage
Quality (dry matter basis) |
|
Species |
Variety |
Dry Forage (lb/A) |
% Protein |
% ADF |
% NDF |
Grain Yield (lb/A) |
| Proso |
common |
3612 |
13.7 |
22.8 |
48.7 |
752 |
| Proso (red) |
Cerise |
3437 |
11.7 |
21.0 |
44.2 |
1001 |
| Proso (white) |
Common |
3661 |
11.2 |
19.0 |
41.3 |
1197 |
| Foxtail |
Golden German |
4039 |
8.3 |
26.2 |
51.3 |
126 |
| Foxtail |
Common Siberian |
4298 |
11.06 |
23.0 |
46.6 |
1080 |
| Pearl |
Common |
910 |
10.6 |
22.0 |
48.6 |
2 |
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