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1.
Vet Med Sci ; 10(2): e1349, 2024 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38400687

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Accurate dosing of feed additives is often required to evaluate their effects on rumen fermentation. This can be done using soluble but nonfermentable hydroxypropyl methylcellulose (HPMC) hard capsules. OBJECTIVES: The aim of the study was to evaluate the effect of HPMC hard capsules on the extent and rate of in vitro gas production in eleven feeds. METHODS: Six high-fibre feeds and five concentrates, were weighed into syringes either directly or into HPMC capsules and incubated anaerobically in 30 mL buffered rumen fluid at 39°C. Data obtained from gas production measurements were fitted using the Gompertz model to obtain kinetic parameters for gas production. RESULTS: HPMC hard capsules had no effect on the gas production of the blank sample and concentrate feeds. In contrast, high-fibre feeds weighed in HPMC showed a significant decrease (p < 0.05) in total gas production and gas produced within 24 h of incubation. CONCLUSIONS: The use of HPMC hard capsules was found to be inappropriate for determining gas production kinetics because fermentation subsides at a certain point when peak fermentation is reached (at TMFR), resulting in a decrease in both total potential gas production and gas production within 24 h of incubation. This is particularly evident when high-fibre feeds are incubated.


Subject(s)
Rumen , Ruminants , Animals , Hypromellose Derivatives/metabolism , Fermentation
2.
OMICS ; 26(11): 586-588, 2022 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36315198

ABSTRACT

In this perspective analysis, we strive to answer the following question: how can we advance integrative biology research in the 21st century with lessons from animal science? At the University of Ljubljana, Biotechnical Faculty, Department of Animal Science, we share here our three lessons learned in the two decades from 2002 to 2022 that we believe could inform integrative biology, systems science, and animal science scholarship in other countries and geographies. Cultivating multiomics knowledge through a conceptual lens of integrative biology is crucial for life sciences research that can stand the test of diverse biological, clinical, and ecological contexts. Moreover, in an era of the current COVID-19 pandemic, animal nutrition and animal science, and the study of their interactions with human health (and vice versa) through integrative biology approaches hold enormous prospects and significance for systems medicine and ecosystem health.


Subject(s)
Biological Science Disciplines , COVID-19 , Animals , Humans , History, 21st Century , Ecosystem , Pandemics , COVID-19/epidemiology , Biology
3.
Food Sci Nutr ; 9(2): 1034-1039, 2021 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33598186

ABSTRACT

The effects of commercial chestnut (CWE) and quebracho (QUE) extract at different inclusion levels to soybean meal (SBM) on the in vitro degradability and digestibility of dry matter (DM) and crude protein (CP) were evaluated. Samples were prepared by mixing 0 (CON), 15, 30, and 60 g/kg of CWE and QUE with SBM, soaked in water overnight at room temperature, dried, and ground. Samples were incubated in duplicate in buffered rumen fluid for 24 hr at 39°C. In vitro rumen degradability of DM and CP of tannin-treated SBM decreased with increasing quantities of tannins, especially with CWE-treated SBM. In vitro abomasal (pepsin-HCl) digestibility of the DM and CP was only slightly suppressed. As a result, rumen by-pass protein (BP-CP) increased with increased quantities of tannins, especially with CWE-treated SBM. In comparison with nontreated SBM, the BP-CP digestibility did not decrease, except with the highest quantity of QUE. Treatment of the SBM with tannins, especially with CWE, increased flow of the undegraded protein to the abomasum, suggesting the better supply of the ruminant animal with amino acids.

4.
J Anim Physiol Anim Nutr (Berl) ; 104(5): 1310-1316, 2020 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32671931

ABSTRACT

The aim of the trial was to evaluate the effect of dietary additions of Stevia rebaudiana Bertoni extract (SB) and Chestnut wood tannin (CWT) on the in vitro rumen fermentability, protozoal population and methane yield. Both plant products were tested at 3 different levels of inclusion (0.75, 1.50 and 3.00% of incubated dry matter, DM) in a total mixed ration (TMR) for ruminants by using rumen batch culture systems and a rumen inoculum collected from sheep. Total volatile fatty acid concentration, their proportions and gas production were not modified by the plant extracts inclusion, except a significant linear increment of gas production at 24 hr for SB (p = .049). Ammonia concentration decreased (p < .05) of about 17% when 1.50 or 3.00% of CWT were included into TMR. Rumen protozoa population was depressed by the SB inclusion (p = .002) with a maximum reduction of 40% at the highest SB dosage, whereas CWT negatively affected total protozoa counts (-19%) only at the dose of 3.00%. In vitro DM and NDF degradability were not affected by the supplementation of SB and CWT, as well as the methane yield. Thus, the addition of SB and CWT decreases the in vitro protozoa population of the rumen with different intensity and without effects on fermentation parameters, apart from a reduction of nitrogen degradability caused by CWT. Despite the effect on protozoa, no decreasing effect on methane production was detected.


Subject(s)
Hippocastanaceae/chemistry , Methane/metabolism , Rumen/metabolism , Rumen/parasitology , Stevia/chemistry , Tannins/administration & dosage , Animal Feed , Animals , Bioreactors , Dietary Supplements , Fermentation
5.
J Anim Physiol Anim Nutr (Berl) ; 102(5): 1146-1153, 2018 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29978922

ABSTRACT

Efficient red deer supplementary feeding depends on estimations of the nutritive value of offered feeds, frequently estimated with the use of equations derived from domestic ruminants. The aim of this study was to compare the 24-hour in vitro true dry matter degradability (ivTD24 ), in vitro gas production (GP) kinetic parameters, GP in 24 hr of incubation (GAS24 ) and short-chain fatty acid (SCFA) and microbial biomass (MBS) produced after 24-hour incubation of feeds in inoculum prepared from sheep and red deer rumen fluid. Eleven feeds, frequently consumed by red deer in Slovenia, which occur either naturally (two fresh grasses, chestnut fruits and common and sessile oak acorns) or are fed as winter supplemental feeds (two grass hays, two grass silages, apple pomace, fresh sugar beetroot), were investigated. The in vitro GP kinetic parameters, GAS24 and ivTD24 , did not differ between animal species. Amounts of SCFAs were greater (p < 0.05) when feeds were incubated in sheep inoculum, while molar proportions of acetic and propionic acids did not differ. Molar proportions of butyric acid produced during incubation of high fibre feeds did not differ between animal species, but were higher (p < 0.05) when feeds high in starch or sugar were incubated in red deer inoculum. Greater production of SCFA by sheep rumen microbes suggests better coverage of host animal with energy precursors, while greater production of MBS by red deer rumen microbes suggests better coverage of host animal with protein. Results also suggest that rumens of sheep and red deer are inhabited by different microbial communities, which did not affect the extent of in vitro GP and degradation of feeds used in the present experiment. However, the possibility exists that the divergent nutrient use could be a consequence of different priming by different feeds of the donor animal diets.


Subject(s)
Animal Feed , Animal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena , Digestion/physiology , Fatty Acids, Volatile/metabolism , Rumen/metabolism , Animal Feed/analysis , Animals , Deer/metabolism , Fermentation , Rumen/microbiology , Sheep/metabolism
6.
J Sci Food Agric ; 94(6): 1248-52, 2014 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24105876

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Hop cones contain several antimicrobial substances. The aim of the study was to determine the effects of two hop varieties, Aurora and Dana, on substrate (diet for a dairy cow, producing 30 kg milk daily) in vitro dry matter (DM) and crude protein (CP) degradability and digestibility. RESULTS: In the in vitro trial freshly ground hops were added to the buffered rumen fluid in concentrations simulating the cow's daily intake of 50, 100 and 200 g of hops. Increasing the concentration of hops decreased (P < 0.05) both the average in vitro DM degradabilities of substrate from 725 to 592, 553 and 481 g kg(-1), respectively, and in vitro CP degradabilities of substrate from 752 to 566, 561 and 478 g kg(-1), respectively. The reduction of in vitro DM and CP degradability is counterbalanced by the (invariable) in vitro DM and CP digestibility. The difference between CP digestibility and degradability represents an estimate of the amount of rumen 'bypass' protein which increased with increasing concentration of hops from 172 to 454 g kg(-1). CONCLUSIONS: Decreased DM and CP degradability and increased amount of rumen 'bypass' protein could lower the amounts of protein required by high-producing ruminant animals. However, this supposition needs a validation with in vivo trials.


Subject(s)
Animal Feed , Diet , Dietary Fiber/metabolism , Dietary Proteins/metabolism , Humulus/chemistry , Plant Preparations/pharmacology , Rumen/drug effects , Animal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena , Animals , Cattle , Dietary Supplements , Digestion , Female , Flowers , Humulus/classification , Nutritional Requirements , Plant Proteins/metabolism , Proteolysis/drug effects , Rumen/metabolism , Species Specificity
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