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Drought conditions in much of Kansas are making forages more susceptible to prussic acid or nitrate poisoning, say officials at Kansas State University. Prussic acid, a derivative of cyanide, may be present in drought-stressed corn and grain sorghum (also known as milo). Farmers seeking to salvage stunted crops often put cattle in fields to graze those crops. Drought-stunted crops can accumulate cyanide and build toxic levels of prussic acid when they're mature. Prussic acid also is suspected as the recent cause of death of cattle grazing Johnsongrass in Comanche County, according to reports from K-State Research and Extension county and area agents. It is generally the lower six inches of the crop that harbors prussic acid, said K-State officials, who offer these guidelines for producers:
All livestock are susceptible to nitrate toxicity, but cattle and horses are affected most often. The guidelines to reduce nitrates in forages include:
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