43 research outputs found

    Effect of different degraded protein balances (OEB) on the performance of beef bulls and on digestibility and rumen fermentation in sheep

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    A total of 125 non-double-muscled Belgian Blue finishing bulls (liveweight range 375-620 kg) were used to investigate the effect of different levels of degraded protein balance in the rumen (OEB) -2, -7, -16 and -22 g/kg DM on animal performance, with the dietary content of true protein digested in the small intestine (DVE) fixed at 80 g/kg. Lower OEB levels significantly reduced daily liveweight gain from 1.57 to 1.39 kg during the first 84 days of the experiment, but not during the subsequent part. For the whole experiment, daily liveweight gain decreased from 1.40 to 1.32 kg but the difference was not significant. Intake of DM, DVE and NE for finishing was not modified by OEB level, while CP intake was reduced and OEB deficit was increased. An OEB level of -22 g/kg DM resulted in a significantly unfavourable conversion of DM and NE during the initial months (11.3 and 11.5% compared with OEB = -2 g/kg DM, respectively). For the total period the conversion of DM and NE was still less favourable, but the differences were not significant. There was a nominal decrease in cold carcass weight and dressing percentage when OEB level decreased, but the effect was not significant. The effect of different OEB levels on digestibility and rumen fermentation was investigated in a separate experiment with wethers. Apparent protein digestibility was reduced from 74.2 to 68.9% when OEB level decreased. Rumen pH and concentrations and molar percentages of volatile fatty acids were not altered by OEB level. Ammonia concentration was only reduced by a lower OEB level at 7 h after feeding. Because of a nominal reduction in daily liveweight gain, feed efficiency, carcass weight, dressing percentage and carcass conformation with decreasing OEB level, it is advisable not to feed less than -16 g OEB/kg DM in diets with 80 g DVE/kg DM to Belgian Blue non-double-muscled finishing bulls from 375 kg onwards. This tolerable OEB deficit is larger than proposed to avoid protein overfeeding

    Effect of β-hydroxybutyric acid, parity, and body condition score on phenotype and proliferative capacity of colostral mononuclear leukocytes of high-yielding dairy cows

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    In neonatal calves, the ingestion of colostrum is imperative for preventing infectious diseases. Investigations into the transfer of passive immunity of cattle have primarily focused on the importance of colostral immunoglobulins, with a recent increase in focus on understanding the role of colostral leukocytes. The main objective of the present study was to measure the influence of parity, body condition score, serum nonesterified fatty acids, and serum beta-hydroxybutyrate concentrations of periparturient cows on phenotype and mitogen-and antigen-induced proliferative capacity of bovine colostral leukocytes. Holstein-Friesian cows (n = 141) were intramuscularly vaccinated at 60 and 30 d before the expected parturition date with a tetanus toxoid vaccine. Of these 141 animals, 28 primiparous and 72 multiparous cows were sampled immediately. after parturition. Colostrum mononuclear cell populations were identified by flow cytometry using bovine cluster of differentiation markers, and the proliferative capacity of these cells was determined using a H-3-thymidine proliferation assay. Under-conditioned cows had a significantly higher percentage of colostral macrophages than normal-conditioned animals, whereas over-conditioned cows had significantly more colostral B-lymphocytes. Serum beta-hydroxybutyrate was significantly associated with higher numbers of colostral T-lymphocytes and macrophages. Heifers had significantly higher mitogen- and antigen-induced proliferation of their colostral leukocytes than third parity or older cows. In conclusion, body condition score, parity, and serum beta-hydroxybutyrate concentration of periparturient high-yielding dairy cows were shown to influence the number of colostral macrophages or the mitogen-and antigen-induced proliferation of colostral leukocytes, possibly influencing the cellular immunity of the newborn calf

    Cow responses and evolution of the rumen bacterial and methanogen community following a complete rumen content transfer

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    Understanding the rumen microbial ecosystem requires the identification of factors that influence the community structure, such as nutrition, physiological condition of the host and host-microbiome interactions. The objective of the current study was to describe the rumen microbial communities before, during and after a complete rumen content transfer. The rumen contents of one donor cow were removed completely and used as inoculum for the emptied rumen of the donor itself and three acceptor cows under identical physiological and nutritional conditions. Temporal changes in microbiome composition and rumen function were analysed for each of four cows over a period of 6 weeks. Shortly after transfer, the cows showed different responses to perturbation of their rumen content. Feed intake depression in the first 2 weeks after transfer resulted in short-term changes in milk production, methane emission, fatty acid composition and rumen bacterial community composition. These effects were more pronounced in two cows, whose microbiome composition showed reduced diversity. The fermentation metrics and microbiome diversity of the other two cows were not affected. Their rumen bacterial community initially resembled the composition of the donor but evolved to a new community profile that resembled neither the donor nor their original composition. Descriptive data presented in the current paper show that the rumen bacterial community composition can quickly recover from a reduction in microbiome diversity after a severe perturbation. In contrast to the bacteria, methanogenic communities were more stable over time and unaffected by stress or host effects

    The potential of milk fatty acids as biomarkers for methane emissions in dairy cows: a quantitative multi-study survey of literature data

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    Relationships between milk fatty acids (MFA) and methane (CH4) emissions from dairy cattle were explored. Data from a total of 12 studies including 39 treatments were gathered in the database. Methane was expressed as daily emissions (g/d), relative to dry matter intake (g/kg), milk production (g/kg milk) and body weight (g/kg). The univariate correlations between MFA and CH4 were based on absolute means and on relative changes of each treatment compared with its corresponding control. Saturated fatty acids, odd- and branched-chain FA and long-chain poly-unsaturated FA were positively related to CH4, while cis- and trans-isomers of mono-unsaturated FA were negatively related to CH4. However, most of the coefficients of determination (R-2) of these univariate regressions ranged from 0.2 to 0.7, indicating that individual MFA only explain a limited part of the variation in CH4. Significant relationships between MFA and CH4 varied depending on the unit in which emissions were expressed. Similarly, some MFA seemed more suited to predict relative changes in CH4 emissions rather than absolute amounts. The present findings contribute to the exploration of the potential of MFA as biomarkers for CH4 emissions from dairy cattle, although differences between studies in the detail of MFA analysis and hence the number of MFA reported in the current study, complicates this kind of literature survey

    The nutritive value of condensed wheat distillers solubles for cattle

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    The chemical composition and the energy and protein value of five batches of condensed distillers solubles (CDS) originating from wheat were determined. The net energy for lactation (NEL) was derived from digestion coefficients obtained with sheep. The true protein digested in the small intestine (DVE) and the rumen degradable protein balance (OEB) were based on the rumen degradation rate (kd D), the rumen undegradable fraction (U) and intestinal digestibility of undegraded protein (%DVBE) predicted by regression equations derived from a data set of 28 protein feeds with kd D, U and %DVBE determined in situ. The CDS is a by-product with a high, but very variable CP content (238 to 495 g/kg DM). The CP contained on average 81% amino acids, with glutamine as main component (on average 21.8% of CP) and a relatively good lysine proportion (3.0%). Further, CDS contains quite a lot of crude fat (mean±SD: 71±14 g/kg DM), glycerol (95±52 g/kg DM) and sugars (123±24 g/kg DM) resulting in a high organic matter digestibility (88.6±3.0%) and high NEL content (8.3±0.4 MJ/kg DM). The protein value showed a large variation, with DVE ranging from 122 to 244 g/kg DM and OEB from 50 to 204 g/kg DM. Wheat CDS is a rich source of minerals and trace elements with exception of calcium.</p
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