Appendix. ^'j'j 



Table II. Average digestibility of American feeding stuffs — continued. 



Feeding stuffs 



Roughage — con. 



Cured hay from the grasses, 

 etc. — con. 



Timothy, past bloom 



Timothy and clover, poorly cured. 



Orchard grass 



Ked top 



Tall oat grass, Arrhenatherum ela 



tins, late bloom 



Mixed grasses, rich in protein 



Mixed grasses, mostly timothy— 



Rowen 



Pasture grass 



Prairie grass, Sporobolus asper 



Kentucky blue grass, Poa pratensis, 



bloom 



Canada blue grass, Poa compressa, 



bloom 



Blue-joint, in bloom 



Blue-joint, past bloom 



Native blue grass, Poa sandbergii-- 

 Western brome grass Bromus mar- 



fjinatus 



Millet 



Cat-tail millet, Pennesetum spica- 



tum- 



Hungarian grass 



Johnson grass, Andropogon halepen- 



sis 



Witch grass (quack), Agropyrum 



repens 



Salt bush, Atriplex argentea 



Salt grasses 



Swale meadow (Swamp hay) 



Low meadow fox grass, Spartina 



juncea 



High-grown salt hay (largely Spar- 

 tina juncea) 



Branch grass (iS'portirux juncea with 



Spartina stricta, var. glabra) 



Wild oat grass, Danthonioi spicata.— 



Sorghum fodder 



Sorghum fodder, leaves 



Sorghum bagasse 



Barley 



Oat 



Wheat and sand vetch 



Oat and pea 



Oat and vetch 



Per ct. 

 51 

 58 

 55 

 51 



