Literature DB >> 17459191

Effect of dietary Enterolobium cyclocarpum on microbial protein flow and nutrient digestibility in sheep maintained fauna-free, with total mixed fauna or with Entodinium caudatum monofauna.

K M Koenig1, M Ivan, B T Teferedegne, D P Morgavi, L M Rode, I M Ibrahim, C J Newbold.   

Abstract

Three groups of five wethers with ruminal and duodenal cannulas and maintained as either fauna-free (FF) or inoculated with total mixed fauna (TF) or Entodinium caudatum as a single-species monofauna (EN) were used in an experiment with two 28 d periods. In the first period, the sheep were fed a control barley-based diet (40:60 concentrate to silage DM) and in the second period the diet was supplemented with 187 g DM of Enterolobium cyclocarpum for the last 12 d of the period. The diets of period 1 and 2 were isonitrogenous. There was no effect of fauna on apparent ruminal and total tract organic matter and fibre digestion, but bacterial and microbial N flow and efficiency were improved in FF sheep compared to TF sheep. In period 2, protozoal numbers were reduced between 31 and 88 % 2 h after feeding E. cyclocarpum for the third to twelfth day of supplementation and by an average of 25 % in samples collected over the 24 h feeding cycle. Supplementation of the diet with E. cyclocarpum and the consequent protozoal reduction in TF and EN sheep improved the flow of non-ammonia N and bacterial N to the small intestine and the efficiency of microbial synthesis. However, E. cyclocarpum reduced ruminal organic matter digestion, especially in faunated sheep, and total tract organic matter, N and fibre digestion. Thus, a reduction in the protozoal cell numbers of 25 % was sufficient to achieve the beneficial effects of reduced fauna on the bacterial protein supply, but diet digestibility was reduced.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17459191     DOI: 10.1017/S0007114507723930

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Br J Nutr        ISSN: 0007-1145            Impact factor:   3.718


  4 in total

1.  Effects of feeding ground pods of Enterolobium cyclocarpum Jacq. Griseb on dry matter intake, rumen fermentation, and enteric methane production by Pelibuey sheep fed tropical grass.

Authors:  S Albores-Moreno; J A Alayón-Gamboa; A J Ayala-Burgos; F J Solorio-Sánchez; C F Aguilar-Pérez; L Olivera-Castillo; J C Ku-Vera
Journal:  Trop Anim Health Prod       Date:  2017-03-23       Impact factor: 1.559

2.  Weaning age influences the severity of gastrointestinal microbiome shifts in dairy calves.

Authors:  S J Meale; S C Li; P Azevedo; H Derakhshani; T J DeVries; J C Plaizier; M A Steele; E Khafipour
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2017-03-15       Impact factor: 4.379

Review 3.  Role of Secondary Plant Metabolites on Enteric Methane Mitigation in Ruminants.

Authors:  Juan Carlos Ku-Vera; Rafael Jiménez-Ocampo; Sara Stephanie Valencia-Salazar; María Denisse Montoya-Flores; Isabel Cristina Molina-Botero; Jacobo Arango; Carlos Alfredo Gómez-Bravo; Carlos Fernando Aguilar-Pérez; Francisco Javier Solorio-Sánchez
Journal:  Front Vet Sci       Date:  2020-08-27

Review 4.  Mitigation of Rumen Methane Emissions with Foliage and Pods of Tropical Trees.

Authors:  Jorge Canul-Solis; María Campos-Navarrete; Angel Piñeiro-Vázquez; Fernando Casanova-Lugo; Marcos Barros-Rodríguez; Alfonso Chay-Canul; José Cárdenas-Medina; Luis Castillo-Sánchez
Journal:  Animals (Basel)       Date:  2020-05-13       Impact factor: 2.752

  4 in total

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