Author:
Henry M. L. E.,Kemp S.,Clarke I. J.,Dunshea F. R.,Leury B. J.
Abstract
A confined feeding study was conducted to compare the production and physiological effects of feeding three doses of wild-type perennial ryegrass alkaloids via whole seed to Merino sheep housed under thermoneutral conditions (21°C, 50% relative humidity). Eighteen Merino ewe weaners (16 months; initial bodyweight 47 ± 1.94 kg) were offered Nil, Low (50 µg/kg liveweight ergovaline, 22 µg/kg liveweight lolitrem B) or High (100 µg/kg liveweight ergovaline, 44 µg/kg liveweight lolitrem B) doses of alkaloids for 21 days. Dry matter intake tended (P = 0.072) to decrease in a linear manner with increasing dietary alkaloid concentration. Rectal temperature and respiration rate increased (P = 0.002 for both) in a linear manner with increasing dietary alkaloid concentration. Oxygen consumption increased linearly (P = 0.064) and quadratically (P = 0.015) with increasing alkaloid concentration, being highest in the Low dose and intermediate in the High dose group. Plasma prolactin decreased linearly (P = 0.002) with increasing dietary alkaloids. These data clearly show that animal production and efficiency are compromised when sheep consume perennial ryegrass alkaloids, even over a short period of time. This study indicates that a pyrogenic response can occur when alkaloids are consumed, even under thermoneutral conditions.
Subject
Animal Science and Zoology,Food Science
Cited by
3 articles.
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