Author:
Carro M. D.,López S.,González J. S.,Ovejero F. J.,Ranilla M. J.
Abstract
Eleven sun-cured hays were used to study the suitability of different
in vitro methods to predict their voluntary dry matter
(DM) intake (VDMI; g DM/kg liveweight) and in vivo
DM digestibility (DMD; g/kg). The methods used were:
(1) gas production at different incubation times when
hays were incubated in vitro with buffered rumen fluid,
(2) DM disappearance at different incubation times with
cellulase (CEL), (3) release of sugars to the
supernatant after incubation with cellulase, and (4)
optical density of the supernatant at λ = 280 nm (as an indicator
of phenolic compounds release) after incubation with cellulase. All kinetic
data were fitted to first-order kinetics models to estimate the rate of
degradation and the potential degradability, and the average degradation rate
and effective degradability (ED) were calculated. The most accurate prediction
of VDMI was by using the average degradation rate of the CEL method in a
single regression equation, which accounted for 0.78 of the variation in
intake (residual s.d. = 1.40). When only data from grass-rich hays were
considered, the inclusion of potential degradability and rate of degradation
of the CEL method in a multiple regression equation accounted for 0.98 of the
variation in intake (residual s.d. = 0.32). The ED of the CEL method
explained 0.93 and 0.92 of the variation in the in vivo
DMD for all hays and grass-rich hays, respectively (residual s.d. =
18.1 and 21.7, respectively). The predictive ability of the different methods
is discussed and compared with that of the in situ
technique that has been previously reported.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Cited by
5 articles.
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