Wheat Bran
Bulky moderate-protein fiber ingredient — mild laxative effect keeps digestion moving in grain-fed show lambs; traditional wet mash conditioning tool
Always read and follow product labels for feeding and sheep safety.
Overview
Wheat bran is the outer layer of the wheat kernel removed during flour milling. It is a bulky, fibrous byproduct with moderate protein and a mild laxative effect that keeps digestion moving in heavily grain-fed show lambs — a genuinely useful function when lambs are on high-energy, grain-heavy finishing rations. Wheat bran is most commonly used in a traditional “wet mash” format (bran + warm water + molasses), fed as a conditioning treat and digestive aid. Its most serious limitation is a very high phosphorus content relative to calcium, making it one of the riskier ingredients for wether rations. Use at low rates only and always paired with compensating calcium.
Nutritional Profile
| Nutrient | Value (dry matter basis) |
|---|---|
| Crude Protein | 15–17% |
| Crude Fat | 3–5% |
| Crude Fiber | 10–12% |
| TDN | 65–70% |
| Calcium | ~0.13% |
| Phosphorus | ~1.10% (very high) |
| Ca:P Ratio | ~1:8 (severely phosphorus-dominant — use with caution in wethers) |
| B Vitamins | Notable: thiamine, niacin, pantothenic acid |
Sheep Safety
Copper: No concern — wheat bran contains no added copper and is safe for sheep.
Urinary calculi (wethers) — HIGH RISK: Wheat bran has one of the highest phosphorus concentrations of any common feed ingredient (~1.1% P). Even at low inclusion rates, it adds significant phosphorus load to an already-high-P grain ration. Strictly limit use in wether programs to ≤4 oz/day maximum, and always pair with limestone and/or high-calcium ingredients (alfalfa pellets, beet pulp) to compensate. If a lamb is already on a high-corn or high-barley ration, consider whether wheat bran is necessary at all.
Show Circuit Use
Primary Role in Program
Wheat bran’s traditional role in the show barn is digestive management — particularly valuable when lambs are eating large quantities of grain and showing signs of constipation, sluggish digestion, or poor coat quality. The wet mash is a barn staple: a handful of wheat bran mixed with warm water and a drizzle of molasses, offered as a supplement feed or conditioning treat. B vitamins in wheat bran contribute to metabolic health and hair coat quality over time.
Research supports using wheat bran to partially replace corn in rations (up to 50% replacement by weight) without reducing growth rate — this makes it a useful tool when corn is expensive or when the goal is to moderate energy density slightly.
Typical Feeding Rates by Phase
| Phase | Rate | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Growing (50–110 lbs) | 2–3 oz/day mixed in ration | Background digestive management |
| Finishing (110 lbs – show) | 3–4 oz/day | Maximum practical rate for wethers |
| Wet mash (occasional) | 4–6 oz per mash | Used 2–3x/week rather than daily |
Maximum recommended inclusion: 5% of total ration by dry matter weight. Never use as a primary ingredient.
How to Feed
Dry: Mixed into grain ration. Wheat bran’s bulky, fibrous texture improves feed texture and reduces dustiness when mixed into a loose grain ration. Ensure adequate limestone is included.
Wet mash: Mix 4–6 oz wheat bran + warm water (enough to make a moist, crumbly consistency) + 1–2 oz molasses. Feed immediately after mixing. The wet mash stimulates palatability and is often used to coax lambs back onto feed after stress, travel, or illness.
Phase Protocols
Growing / Finishing | Digestive Management
- Rate: 2–4 oz/day, mixed dry into ration
- Calcium: Include limestone (0.25–0.5 oz/day) specifically to offset wheat bran’s phosphorus load
- Purpose: Maintain gut motility in grain-fed lambs; contribute B vitamins for coat and metabolism
Occasional Wet Mash | Appetite Restoration
- Rate: One mash (4–6 oz bran) as needed, 2–3x/week maximum
- Trigger: Lambs coming off feed, returning from travel, or showing poor coat quality
- Recipe: Wheat bran + warm water + molasses; add a pinch of salt; mix to moist consistency; feed fresh
Stacking & Combinations
Wheat bran + molasses (wet mash): The classic show barn conditioning mash. Excellent palatability tool for off-feed lambs.
Wheat bran + alfalfa pellets: The calcium in alfalfa partially offsets wheat bran’s phosphorus load — a safer pairing for wethers than wheat bran + corn alone.
Avoid: Wheat bran + corn or barley without calcium supplementation — the combined phosphorus load from high-P grain plus very-high-P wheat bran creates severe urinary calculi risk in wethers.
Sourcing & Cost
Available from most grain mills, co-ops, and some farm supply stores. Less commonly stocked than other commodities — may need to order in bulk from a local mill. Typically inexpensive per pound. Check freshness — wheat bran has a shorter shelf life than grain due to higher fat content in the germ fraction; buy in quantities you’ll use within 4–6 weeks.
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