Cooperative Research Program

G. R. Smith and G. W. Evers
Texas AgriLife Research, Overton

W. R. Ocumpaugh, (retired)
Texas AgriLife Research, Beeville
 


PREVENTING  TOXICITY  IN  SWEETCLOVER HAY

Moldy sweetclover hay or spoiled silage contains a compound called dicoumarol.   Dicoumarol is a blood-thinning agent that reduces the clotting ability of the blood, and livestock that ingest dicoumarol may die due to uncontrolled internal or external bleeding.   Dicoumarol is formed from the organic compound, coumarin, by fungal metabolism in moldy sweetclover hay or spoiled sweetclover silage. Toxicity is only a concern when feeding hay, silage, or any stored form of sweetclover. Toxicity does not occur under grazing, even with high coumarin sweetclover cultivars.

Coumarin is a natural compound found in sweetclover. A single, partially-dominant gene controls the presence of coumarin and the potential for dicoumarol contamination but no low coumarin cultivars of annual sweetclover have ever been developed. ‘Denta’ is a low coumarin cultivar of biennial white sweetclover.  Because of the biennial trait, Denta is poorly adapted to Texas but has been used as a parent in a breeding program to transfer the low coumarin gene into annual sweetclover cultivars for Texas.
 

 

.

 

General information:
History of use
Preventing toxicity in hay
Vegetation map of Texas

Different types of sweetclover



Sweetclover research:

Yield and flowering data
Growth habit
Sweetclover Rust Disease
 

Home
Back to AggieClover