| Literature DB >> 30175251 |
Muhammed A Arowolo1, Jianhua He1.
Abstract
Ruminant production, especially in the tropics and developing countries suffers a setback when compared with the temperate and developed countries, which is attributable to the kinds of available feed resources in the region of production. In the tropics, ruminants are restricted to grazing on low-quality forages, crop residues and agro-industrial by-products with very little or no concentrate diets, which adversely affect the animals in exhibiting their full production potential. Considering this fact, there is an increasing interest in improving the digestibility of these feed resources. In recent years, researchers have explored several methods to enhance the functions of rumen microflora, improve digestion and fermentation processes, as well as increase bioavailability and utilization of nutrients through feed supplementation. This review aims to explore the positive effects of supplementation of ruminant diets with probiotics or botanical extracts and their metabolites on the productivity of the animals. Moreover, the functions of these non-pathogenic and non-toxic live microorganisms (probiotics) and plant biologically active compounds (botanical extract) are explored because of the ban on non-therapeutic use of antibiotics as growth promoters coupled with the critical preference of consumers to high quality and safe animal products. It has been reported that these alternative supplemental products have a beneficial impact on both animal health and productivity, which is affecting stabilization of rumen environment, inhibition of pathogenic bacteria proliferation in gastro-intestinal tract, modulation of immune response, increase in fibre degradation and fermentation, nutrients availability and utilization, animal growth performance and milk production, among others. However, long-term in vivo studies are still required to determine the synergetic effects of these 2 safe supplemental products.Entities:
Keywords: Botanical extracts; Probiotics; Ruminant; Supplementation; Tropics
Year: 2018 PMID: 30175251 PMCID: PMC6116326 DOI: 10.1016/j.aninu.2018.04.010
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Anim Nutr ISSN: 2405-6383
Observations from different articles reporting effects of yeast on rumen microorganisms and functions.
| Title of research | Treatment/Dosage/System | Observations and summary | Authors |
|---|---|---|---|
| Effects of | Varying doses of yeast ( | Direct addition or 72 h pre-incubation of Direct addition or 72 h pre-incubation of Improve ruminal fermentation of low quality forages at 4 to 12 g/kg DM because gas production depends on nutrient availability for rumen microorganisms. | |
| Effects of | The molar proportion of acetate and propionate respectively increased linearly with an increasing amount of Microbial protein increased linearly with an increasing level of Fungi population was increased with 1 g/L It is inferred that the addition of | ||
| Effect of yeast culture ( | Yeast culture ( | A significant increase in the mean protozoal count (by 3.0 × 104 per mL) and the total bacterial count (by about 4.0 × 104 per mL) as compared with the control group. |
DM = dry matter; NDF = neutral detergent fibre; RS = rice straw; CS = corn silage; CSNG = corn silage without grain; CSG = corn silage with grains; VFA = volatile fatty acid.
Observations from different articles reporting effects of bacterial probiotics on rumen microorganisms and functions.
| Title of research | Treatment/Dosage/System | Observations and summary | Authors |
|---|---|---|---|
| Effect of supplemental | Live | Increase in microbial crude protein flow into duodenum by 13.5%. Decrease in ammonia nitrogen concentration in the ruminal fluid at 0.5, 1, 3, 6 h after morning feeding by an average of 18%. Increased total VFA and acetate concentrations in the ruminal fluid at 0.5, 1, 3, 6 h after morning feeding by an average of 19%. Ruminal apparent nutrient digestibility of NDF, ADF and OM was also increased. | |
| Repeated ruminal dosing of | During repeated dosing, it was observed that NJ modified the abundance of other cellulolytic bacterial populations in the rumen when compared with periods with no dosing. The NJ also improved in sacco digestibility of Timothy hay with the high concentrate diet. Increase in the persistence of NJ was also noticed in weeks of dosing in the cows. | ||
| Effect of L. | A mixture of | A significant increase in lactic acid concentration and markedly decreased the concentration of acetic acid in silage. When fed to the animals, rumen microbe count of the cows fed treated silage was 13.9% higher than that of control. The ratio of acetic acid to propionic acid was lower by 1.19% in the rumen of cows offered treated silage. Improved rumen protein synthesis, whereas the content of protein nitrogen and that of total nitrogen in the rumen were higher by 5.17 mg/l00 mL and by 3.37 mg/l00 mL compared to the control. |
VFA = volatile fatty acid; NDF = neutral detergent fibre; ADF = acid detergent fiber; OM = organic matter.
Fig. 1Classification of plant secondary metabolites.
Literatures on the effects of tannins on rumen function.
| Type | Plant source | Dosage | System/Host | Reports | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Condensed tannin (CT) | Quebracho | 0, 1% and 2% CT/kg DMI | Increased ADWG at both levels of CT supplementation (i.e., 2.25 kg/d at 2% CT, 2.09 kg/d at 1% CT compared to 1.82 kg/d in the control). A huge reduction in severity of bloat (by 90% at 2% CT and 40% at 1% CT) by reducing microbial activities, biofilm production and ruminal gas production. Reduced rate of The decrease in ruminal methane production at increasing CT supplementation. | ||
| Condensed tannin | Spray-dried quebracho tannin | 0.1, 0.2 and 0.4 mg/mL of medium | Significant reduction in total number of protozoa at increasing level of tannin inclusion (i.e., 44% reduction at 0.1 mg/mL CT inclusion, 46% decrease at 0.2% mg/mL and 64% decrease at 0.4% mg/mL. No effect on the level of SCFA but molar proportion of propionate was significantly higher by almost 10% and butyrate lower by 13% when compared to the control. Reduced NH3 concentration by 47% though the DMD of the feed was not significantly affected. | ||
| Condensed tannin | Quebracho, Silvateam, Ontario, CA | 0, 0.2%, 0.4%, and 0.6% of dry matter basis | ADG increased by 6.5%, with a tendency (linear effect) for ADG to increase with the level of supplementation. The DMI likewise tended to increase (linear effect) with the level of supplementation. Gain efficiency increased by 5.5% and dietary NE by 3.2%. However, neither gain efficiency nor dietary NE was improved by feeding more than 0.2% of supplemental tannin. | ||
| Condensed and hydrolysable tannin | Quebracho, Silvateam, Ontario, | 1) 0, 0.6% condensed tannin | Tannin (0.6%) increased ADWG by 6.8%. This response was not affected by tannin source. Improved DMI by 4%. However, compared to controls, DMI was greater by 7.1%, for steers fed the 50:50 combinations of the condensed and soluble tannins than when tannin sources were fed singly (2.4%). | ||
| Blend of condensed and hydrolysable tannin | – | 0, 2, 4 or 6 g | Improved water consumption at increasing level of tannin inclusion and up to 24% at 6 g/kg dietary dry matter. No effects on ADG, DMI or gain-to-feed ratio. It was concluded that long-term supplementation of tannins may not enhance growth performance or carcass characteristics in finishing lambs, and may decrease energy utilization of the diet when is supplemented beyond 4 g/kg DM. |
DMI = dry matter intake; ADWG = average daily weight gain; SCFA = short-chain fatty acids; NH3 = ammonia; DMD = dry matter digestibility; ADG = average daily gain; NE = net energy.
Literatures on the effects of Saponin on rumen function.
| Type | Plant source | Dosage | System/Host | Reports | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Triterpenoid | Alfalfa | 2% and 4% of DMI | Reduced protozoa population in the rumen by 34% and 66% at 2% and 4% level of inclusion rates, respectively. | ||
| 10% Saponin (wt/wt) | Quillaja saponara | 0.4% inclusin rate | Decrease in protozoa population by 54%. | ||
| Tea saponin | Seeds of tea | 8 mg in 30 mL | Reduction in protozoa number up to 79%. | ||
– | Quillaja saponaria (extract) | 60 g/head per day | Decreased protozoa count by 61% when compared with the control. | ||
| – | 1) Fenugreek | 1) 11.54 mg/40 mL | Fenugreek decreased in protozoa count by 39% (i.e., from 19.54 × 104 to 11.93 × 104 per mL). Sesbania reduced protozoa count by 36% (i.e., from 19.54 × 104 to 12.41 × 104 per mL). Knautia reduced protozoa count by 25% (i.e., from 19.54 × 104 to 14.66 × 104 per mL). No significant differences in the concentration of the SCFA. Reduced anaerobic fungal population (Fenugreek by 65% and Sesbania by 38%). Decrease in Methanogens population (Sesbania by 78%, Fenugreek by 22% and Knautia by 21%). Increase in the population of fibre degrading bacteria. e.g., | ||
| 2) Sesbania | 2) 21.8 mg/40 mL | ||||
| 3) Knautia | 3) 7.76 mg/40 mL | ||||
| Methanol extract saponin | Sapindus rarak | 1) 0.25 mg/mL | Increased SCFA production at 48 h with increasing inclusion level. (i.e., from 71.9 μmol/L in control to 77 μmol/L at 4.0 mg/mL). Increase in microbial biomass (by 30%) with increasing inclusion level. Increased bacteria RNA at 1.0 mg/mL inclusion. Reduction in methanogen RNA at the highest concentration of 4.0 mg/mL. No effects on | ||
| 2) 0.5 mg/mL | |||||
| 3) 1.0 mg/mL | |||||
| 4) 2.0 mg/mL | |||||
| 5) 4.0 mg/mL |
DMI = dry matter intake; SCFA = short-chain fatty acids.