Digestion of two legumes and rumen bacterial growth in defaunated sheep

1972 ◽  
Vol 23 (2) ◽  
pp. 321 ◽  
Author(s):  
JR Lindsay ◽  
JP Hogan

Defaunated sheep offered lucerne hay or dried red clover were used to study digestion in the stomach of dietary organic matter, plant cell wall constituents, and plant cell contents. Digestion in that section of the tract was, for dietary organic matter, 50 % with lucerne and 60% with red clover, for plant cell contents 65–70% with both diets, and for plant cell wall constituents 30% with lucerne and 60 % with red clover. Estimates of growth of rumen bacteria in these sheep indicated that about 32 g of bacterial organic matter and 23 g of bacterial crude protein were synthesized in the rumen for each 100 g of plant organic matter digested. Comparisons of apparent digestion in the stomach and intestines were made between the defaunated sheep and the same sheep carrying a normal population of rumen microorganisms. Levels of rumen ammonia were lower in the absence of protozoa. However, only small differences were observed in the flow of digesta along the tract and in the apparent digestion of organic matter and nitrogen in both the stomach and intestines as a result of defamation. Hence it is suggested that data on the digestion of forages obtained with defaunated sheep can be applied to sheep with rumen protozoa.

1980 ◽  
Vol 31 (1) ◽  
pp. 147 ◽  
Author(s):  
JP Hogan ◽  
JR Lindsay

The digestion of dietary cell wall constituents was estimated during measurements of the passage of digesta from the stomach and intestines of sheep. Two groups of four sheep were used, and they were fed on either mature wheaten hay at 600 g/d or immature dried ryegrass at 800 g/d. Cell wall constituents comprised c. 58.7% and 39.8% of the organic matter in the two diets, while the nitrogen associated with cell wall was equivalent respectively to 14.1 and 24.6 % of dietary nitrogen. With wheaten hay, 45 % of cell wall organic matter and 25 % of cell wall nitrogen were digested in the stomach. The corresponding values for ryegrass were, respectively, 81 and 89 %. The nitrogen in cell wall contributed about 9% of non-ammonia nitrogen in digesta leaving the stomach and 15 % in digesta leaving the ileum with wheaten hay, but only 4-5 % at each site with ryegrass. Although the release of amino acids from cell wall in the small intestine was less than from the remaining crude protein in digesta, it was concluded that the amounts involved were too small to have much effect on the apparent release of amino acids in digesta passing through the small intestine.


1969 ◽  
Vol 56 (1) ◽  
pp. 79-86 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. T. J. CLARKE ◽  
R. W. BAILEY ◽  
B. D. E. GAILLARD

1983 ◽  
Vol 34 (3) ◽  
pp. 307 ◽  
Author(s):  
JK Egan ◽  
GR Pearce ◽  
PT Doyle ◽  
R Thomas

In two experiments, estimates of the quantity and composition of digesta in the reticula-rumen of sheep given a roughage diet were made using a recently published marker technique. These estimates were compared with measurements made on the same sheep at slaughter. Estimates of digesta dry matter were influenced by the method of obtaining digesta samples from the rumen. When samples were withdrawn through a plastic tube, the resultant estimates underestimated the values obtained at slaughter by an average of 6%. An alternative sampling procedure is described which provided estimates within 1.5 % of values at slaughter. Values obtained for the organic matter, plant cell wall, and nitrogen content of digesta were similar for the slaughter method and the marker technique, irrespective of the method of sampling. In both experiments, the marker technique consistently underestimated the quantity of water in the rumen by 2-19 %. The importance of measures made on digesta load in the reticulo-rumen is illustrated by an examination of the variability between sheep in digestion of plant cell wall material.


1996 ◽  
Vol 45 (Suppl. 1) ◽  
pp. 291-295
Author(s):  
E. Forano ◽  
V. Broussolle ◽  
R. Durand

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