Literature DB >> 22829607

Rumen degradable protein supply affects microbial efficiency in continuous culture and growth in steers.

M A Brooks1, R M Harvey, N F Johnson, M S Kerley.   

Abstract

We hypothesized that microbial efficiency and output from fermentation in the rumen would be optimized when peptide supply was balanced with peptide requirement of ruminal microflora. This study was conducted to measure response of varying rumen degradable peptide (RDPep) supply on ruminal fermentation characteristics and steer growth. A continuous culture experiment was conducted with diets formulated to achieve a predicted RDPep balance (RDPep supplied above RDPep required) of -0.30 to 1.45% CP with rumen degradable N (RDN) balance (RDN supplied above RDN required) above dietary ammonia-N requirement of microbes. Two additional treatments had RDPep balances of -0.30 and 0.78% CP with insufficient ammonia-N supply to meet microbial requirements. Single-flow fermenters (N = 24; n = 6) were inoculated with rumen fluid and maintained anaerobically at 39°C with a 0.06 h(-1) dilution rate. Inadequate RDN decreased OM digestion and microbial N flow, and increased rumen undegradable N (P < 0.01). Microbial efficiency decreased in RDN-deficient diets and was greatest when RDPep balance did not excessively exceed microbial requirement of RDPep predicted (P < 0.01). A growth study was conducted with 49 yearling, crossbred, Angus steers (initial BW 370 ± 34 kg). Animals were assigned to 1 of 4 treatment groups by BW and further divided into 3 pens with 4 steers per pen to achieve similar initial pen weights. Treatments consisted of 4 isonitrogenous diets balanced for RDN but varying in predicted RDPep balance (0.55%, -0.02%, -0.25%, and -0.65% CP). Animals were maintained on treatment for 70 d with individual BW taken on d 0, 1, 21, 42, 70, and 71. Final BW decreased linearly with decreasing RDPep (P = 0.05). Average daily gain and G:F displayed a quadratic effect with greater ADG and G:F at greater and lesser RDPep levels (P = 0.02). We concluded that balancing RDPep supply to predicted requirement improved fermentation efficiency and microbial output, which in turn improved animal performance.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22829607     DOI: 10.2527/jas.2011-4107

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Anim Sci        ISSN: 0021-8812            Impact factor:   3.159


  3 in total

1.  Seasonal effect on rumen function in sheep on range in the Accra Plains of Ghana.

Authors:  Leonard Kofi Adjorlolo; Tsatsu Adogla-Bessa; Kofi Amaning-Kwarteng; Benjamin Kwadjo Ahunu
Journal:  Trop Anim Health Prod       Date:  2014-07-05       Impact factor: 1.559

2.  Effects of rumen-degradable-to-undegradable protein ratio in ruminant diet on in vitro digestibility, rumen fermentation, and microbial protein synthesis.

Authors:  Ezi Masdia Putri; Mardiati Zain; Lili Warly; Hermon Hermon
Journal:  Vet World       Date:  2021-03-17

3.  Nutrient Digestibility, Microbial Fermentation, and Response in Bacterial Composition to Methionine Dipeptide: An In Vitro Study.

Authors:  Fanlin Kong; Yanfang Liu; Shuo Wang; Yijia Zhang; Wei Wang; Hongjian Yang; Na Lu; Shengli Li
Journal:  Biology (Basel)       Date:  2022-01-07
  3 in total

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