| Literature DB >> 10414031 |
R E Pitt1, T L Cross, A N Pell, P Schofield, P H Doane.
Abstract
Physiological systems models for ruminant animals are used to predict the extent of ruminal carbohydrate digestion, based on rates of intake, digestion, and passage to the lower tract. Digestion of feed carbohydrates is described in these models by a first-order rate constant. Recently, an in vitro gas production technique has been developed to determine the digestion kinetics in batch fermentation, and nonlinear mathematical models have been fitted to the cumulative gas production data from these experiments. In this paper, we present an analysis that converts these gas production models to an effective first-order rate constant that can be used directly in rumen systems models. The analysis considers the digestion of an incremental mass of substrate entering the rumen. The occurrence of passage is represented probabilistically, and integration through time gives the total mass of substrate and total rate of digestion in the rumen. To demonstrate the analysis, several gas production models are fitted to a sample data set for corn silage, and the effective first-order rate constants are calculated. The rate constants for digestion depend on ruminal passage rate, an interaction that arises from the nonlinearity of the gas production models.Entities:
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Year: 1999 PMID: 10414031 DOI: 10.1016/s0025-5564(99)00020-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Math Biosci ISSN: 0025-5564 Impact factor: 2.144