Abstract
Two experiments were carried out at Mt. Cotton, The University
of
Queensland, from November
1992 to July 1993, to study the effect of extent of digestion or feed type
(grass or legume) on particle
kinetics in the rumen. Small (0·5–1·18 mm) Yb-labelled
grass or legume particles, either digested or
undigested, were injected into the rumen of sheep fed on different diets,
and
their retention time in
the reticulo-ruminal compartment measured. In Expt 1, four intact wethers
were
fed on either
pangola grass hay, chaffed lucerne hay, pelleted lucerne hay or commercial
pelleted concentrate.
Digested particles from the faeces of animals fed on pangola or lucerne
and
undigested material from
the same diets were wet-sieved and the fraction 0·5–1·18
mm
collected, labelled with Yb-acetate and
injected into the animals together with a solution of Cr-EDTA. Faecal samples
were taken and
analysed for marker concentrations. In Expt 2, four similar animals, fitted
with
duodenal and ruminal
cannulae, were fed on different proportions of pangola grass hay and lucerne
hay,
and Cr-EDTA and
the above mentioned labelled particles were injected through the rumen
cannula.
Samples were taken from the duodenum and analysed for marker concentrations.The results indicated that diet characteristics rather than extent of
digestion or particle type had
the greatest influence on rates of passage of both liquid and particulate
phases. Different proportions
of pangola and lucerne did not result in marked differences in either the
volumes of rumen contents
or the rates of passage of the solid phase marker but altered the rates
of
passage of Cr-EDTA.
Increasing the proportion of legume increased intake and decreased retention
time markedly, with no additive effects on digestibility.Particles of the same small size escaped with the same fractional passage
rate within each diet,
irrespective of type (grass or legume) or status (undigested or digested),
indicating identical kinetics within each rumen type.It was concluded that rumen conditions as influenced by diet type have
most
influence on water and
particle kinetics and that extent of digestion of the small particles used
in
our experiments was not
important. Particles of legume or grass of the same size behaved similarly
within a diet type.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Genetics,Agronomy and Crop Science,Animal Science and Zoology
Cited by
52 articles.
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