| Literature DB >> 27173405 |
Miguel Peña-Espinoza1, Stig M Thamsborg2, Olivier Desrues2, Tina V A Hansen2, Heidi L Enemark1.
Abstract
Two experiments studied the effects of dietary chicory against gastrointestinal nematodes in cattle. In Experiment (Exp.) 1, stabled calves were fed chicory silage (CHI1; n = 9) or ryegrass/clover hay (CTL1; n = 6) with balanced protein/energy intakes between groups. After 16 days, all calves received 10 000 Ostertagia ostertagi and 66 000 Cooperia oncophora third-stage larvae (L3) [day (D) 0 post-infection (p.i.)]. In Exp. 2, calves were assigned to pure chicory (CHI2; n=10) or ryegrass/clover (CTL2; n = 10) pastures. After 7 days, animals received 20 000 O. ostertagi L3/calf (D0 p.i.) and were moved regularly preventing pasture-borne infections. Due to poor regrowth of the chicory pasture, CHI2 was supplemented with chicory silage. At D40 p.i. (Exp. 1) and D35 p.i. (Exp. 2) calves were slaughtered for worm recovery. In Exp.1, fecal egg counts (FEC) were similar between groups. However, O. ostertagi counts were significantly reduced in CHI1 by 60% (geometric mean; P < 0·01), whereas C. oncophora burdens were unaffected (P = 0·12). In Exp. 2, FEC were markedly lowered in CHI2 from D22 p.i onwards (P < 0·01). Ostertagia ostertagi adult burdens were significantly reduced in CHI2 by 66% (P < 0·001). Sesquiterpene lactones were identified only in chicory (fresh/silage). Chicory shows promise as an anti-Ostertagia feed for cattle and further studies should investigate its on-farm use.Entities:
Keywords: Cichorium intybus; Cooperia oncophora; Ostertagia ostertagi; anthelmintic effects; cattle; ruminant; sesquiterpene lactones; silage
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27173405 PMCID: PMC4988272 DOI: 10.1017/S0031182016000706
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Parasitology ISSN: 0031-1820 Impact factor: 3.234
Fig. 1.Study design of Experiment 1 investigating the course of experimental infections with Ostertagia ostertagi and Cooperia oncophora in stabled calves fed with chicory silage and concentrate (CHI1) or ryegrass/clover hay and concentrate (CTL1) during 56 days.
Fig. 2.Study design of Experiment 2 investigating the course of experimental infections with Ostertagia ostertagi in calves grazing pure forage chicory (CHI2) or ryegrass/clover (CTL2) during 42 days.
Chemical composition of feeds offered to stabled calves infected with Ostertagia ostertagi and Cooperia oncophora in Experiment 1
| Experimental feeds | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Chicory silage | Ryegrass/clover hay | Concentrate | |
| DM (%) | 35·7 | 86·5 | 89·6 |
| CP (g kg−1 DM) | 93 | 84 | 204 |
| ME (MJ kg−1 DM) | 6·5 | 7·2 | 10·5 |
| AAT (g kg−1 DM) | 54 | 63 | 114 |
| OMD (% of DM) | 62 | 59 | 83 |
| Crude ash (g kg−1 DM) | 207 | 49 | 70 |
| Sand (g kg−1 DM) | 72 | 0·0 | 0·0 |
| NDF (g kg−1 DM) | 326 | 577 | 286 |
| CT | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. |
| SL | 12·3 | 0·0 | 0·0 |
| DI-LAC | 2·1 | 0·0 | 0·0 |
| LAC | 1·8 | 0·0 | 0·0 |
| 8-DOL | 1·2 | 0·0 | 0·0 |
| DI-8-DOL | 3·8 | 0·0 | 0·0 |
| DI-LCP | 2·6 | 0·0 | 0·0 |
| LCP | 0·8 | 0·0 | 0·0 |
DM, dry matter; CP, crude protein; ME, metabolizable energy; AAT, aminoacid absorbed in the intestine: OMD = in vivo organic matter digestibility; NDF, neutral detergent fibre; CT, condensed tannins; SL, sesquiterpene lactones; LAC, lactucin; DI-LAC, 11, 13-dihydro-lactucin; 8-DOL, 8-deoxylactucin; DI-8-DOL, 11, 13-dihydro-8-deoxylactucin; LCP, lactucopicrin; DI-LCP, 11, 13-dihydro-lactucopicrin; n.d., not detected.
Grønmix® (Danish Agro).
According to Grabber et al. (2013; estimated detection limit = 0·2% of CT in DM).
According to Peña-Espinoza et al. (2015).
Estimated dry matter, crude protein and metabolizable energy intakes in stabled calves fed with chicory silage and concentrate (Chicory) or ryegrass/clover hay and concentrate (Control) in Experiment 1
| Day post infection | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Group | Daily mean (± | 0 | 7 | 14 | 21 | 28 | 35 | 40 |
| Chicory ( | DM (kg) | 1·7 (±0·1) | 2·3 (±0·2) | 2·4 (±0·1) | 3·0 (±0·2) | 3·1 (±0·1) | 3·1 (±0·2) | 3·0 (±0·2) |
| CP (g) | 192·7 (±26·5) | 264·9 (±10·4) | 278·8 (±2·9) | 356·2 (±17·6) | 369·5 (±2·9) | 375·3 (±12·7) | 362·6 (±12·1) | |
| ME (MJ) | 12·9 (±1·4) | 17·8 (±0·9) | 18·9 (±0·5) | 23·1 (±0·2) | 23·0 (±0·2) | 23·4 (±1·1) | 22·9 (±1·1) | |
| Control ( | DM (kg) | 2·0 (±0·2) | 2·5 (±0·2) | 2·6 (±0·5) | 2·9 (±0·4) | 3·1 (±0·5) | 3·2 (±0·6) | 3·1 (±0·6) |
| CP (g) | 236·9 (±5·2) | 278·6 (±3·4) | 298·0 (±31·0) | 343·7 (±18·0) | 375·6 (±20·9) | 372·0 (±17·4) | 366·7 (±14·0) | |
| ME (MJ) | 16·8 (±0·9) | 20·0 (±0·9) | 21·3 (±3·2) | 24·3 (±2·3) | 26·2 (±2·9) | 26·5 (±3·1) | 25·9 (±2·9) | |
Data is based on daily measurements from subgroups of three calves and presented as daily mean intakes (±S.D.) of the preceding 5/7 days for a standard calf of 100 kg body weight (BW).
DM, dry matter; CP, crude protein; ME, metabolizable energy.
Fig. 3.Arithmetic mean fecal egg counts (FEC; A) and FEC per g of fecal dry matter (FECDM; B) in stabled calves experimentally infected with Ostertagia ostertagi and Cooperia oncophora and fed with chicory silage and concentrate (CHI1) or ryegrass/clover hay and concentrate (CTL1) in Experiment 1. Error bars indicate s.d. *P < 0·05.
Fig. 4.Arithmetic mean percentage of Ostertagia ostertagi third-stage larvae (L3) identified in pooled fecal larval cultures of stabled calves experimentally infected with O. ostertagi and Cooperia oncophora and fed with chicory silage and concentrate (CHI1) or ryegrass/clover hay and concentrate (CTL1) in Experiment 1. Error bars indicate s.d.
Worm counts of adult Ostertagia ostertagi and Cooperia oncophora detected post-mortem in stabled calves fed with chicory silage and concentrate (Chicory) or ryegrass/clover hay and concentrate (Control) in Experiment 1
| Group | Males | Females | Total | Males | Females | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chicory ( | 878* (175–1915) | 984** (250–1800) | 1862** (425–3715) | 17 537 (6750–25 450) | 19 267 (11 200–25 750) | 36 804 (17 950–51 200) |
| Control ( | 1747 (1205–2235) | 2152 (1555–2960) | 3899 (2760–5195) | 10 392 (800–29 200) | 12 750 (800–27 450) | 23 142 (1600–56 650) |
Results are presented as arithmetic means (range).
*P < 0·05; **P < 0·01.
Fig. 5.Arithmetic mean serum pepsinogen levels (in units tyrosine; U Tyr/L) in stabled calves experimentally infected with Ostertagia ostertagi and Cooperia oncophora and fed with chicory silage and concentrate (CHI1) or ryegrass/clover hay and concentrate (CTL1) in Experiment 1. Error bars indicate s.d.
Chemical composition of feeds consumed by calves in Experiment 2
| Experimental feeds | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Fresh forage chicory | Chicory silage | Ryegrass/clover | |
| DM (%) | 11·5 (±4·3) | 23·5 | 22·0 (±2·1) |
| CP (g kg−1 DM) | 98·2 (±32·1) | 117·2 | 159·8 (±4·1) |
| ME (MJ kg−1 DM) | 7·2 (±0·9) | 8·6 | 8·3 (±0·5) |
| AAT (g kg−1 DM) | 67·5 (±6·4) | 66·0 | 80·1 (±4·2) |
| OMD (% of DM) | 63·1 (±9·5) | 74·5 | 67·1 (±4·7) |
| Crude ash (g kg−1 DM) | 150·2 (±30·7) | 147·2 | 108·6 (±5·2) |
| Sand (g kg−1 DM) | 17·0 (±1·4) | 5·0 | 22·0 (±11·3) |
| NDF (g kg−1 DM) | 260·5 (±54·5) | 326·4 | 430·2 (±24·3) |
| CT | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. |
| SL | 22·5 | 16·8 | 0·0 |
| DI-LAC | 5·9 | 3·4 | 0·0 |
| LAC | 6·1 | 2·7 | 0·0 |
| 8-DOL | 3·1 | 1·5 | 0·0 |
| DI-8-DOL | 3·5 | 4·1 | 0·0 |
| DI-LCP | 3·5 | 4·6 | 0·0 |
| LCP | 0·4 | 0·5 | 0·0 |
Results for fresh forage chicory and ryegrass/clover are presented as means (±s.d.), summarizing the samples collected from the swards at D − 7 and D28 p.i.
DM, dry matter; CP, crude protein; ME, metabolizable energy; AAT, aminoacid absorbed in the intestine; OMD, in vivo organic matter digestibility; NDF, neutral detergent fibre; CT, condensed tannins; SL, sesquiterpene lactones; LAC, lactucin; DI-LAC, 11, 13-dihydro-lactucin; 8-DOL, 8-deoxylactucin; DI-8-DOL, 11, 13-dihydro-8-deoxylactucin; LCP, lactucopicrin; DI-LCP, 11, 13-dihydro-lactucopicrin; n.d., not detected.
According to Grabber et al. (2013; estimated detection limit = 0·2% of CT in DM).
According to Peña-Espinoza et al. (2015).
Fig. 6.Arithmetic mean fecal egg counts (FEC; A) and FEC per g of fecal dry matter (FECDM; B) in calves experimentally infected with Ostertagia ostertagi and grazing pure forage chicory (CHI2) or ryegrass/clover (CTL2) in Experiment 2. Error bars indicate s.d. *P < 0·05; **P < 0·01.
Fig. 7.Arithmetic mean serum pepsinogen levels (in units tyrosine; U Tyr/L) in calves experimentally infected with Ostertagia ostertagi and grazing pure forage chicory (CHI2) or ryegrass/clover (CTL2) in Experiment 2. Error bars indicate s.d.