Author:
Revell Dean K.,Baker Suzanne K.,Purser D. Barrie
Abstract
The hypothesis was tested that when nitrogen (N) and sulfur (S) are mobilised
from body tissue the rate of wool growth is determined both by the amount of N
and S apparently digested and by the amount of N and S mobilised from body
tissue. The experiment consisted of seven 5-day periods (Periods 1–7)
and N and S retention were measured during each period in 12 mature Merino
wethers. During Periods 2 and 3, casein and methionine were infused into the
abomasum of all sheep to increase the amount of N and S absorbed in the small
intestine. Three nutritional regimes were used in order to manipulate the
amount of N and S mobilised from body tissues after the cessation of the
abomasal infusion: one group of sheep (n = 4) was
fed ad libitum throughout the experiment (Group A),
another group (n = 4) was fed at a level
calculated to maintain liveweight throughout the experiment (Group M), and the
third group (n = 4) was fed
ad libitum pre-infusion and during the infusion but was
then fed at a level calculated to maintain liveweight after the infusion
ceased (Group AM). The infusion of the supplement increased wool growth, and
when the infusion ceased, it took 10 days for wool growth to return to a
steady rate of growth. Wool growth per unit of apparently digested N or S
increased markedly when N or S was mobilised from body tissue, indicating that
mobilised protein was used for wool growth. Based on the relationship between
the apparent retention of N and S in body tissues excluding wool, and changes
in plasma amino acid concentrations, it appeared that the supply of
S-containing amino acids from body tissue limited the use of mobilised protein
for wool growth.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Cited by
4 articles.
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