Abstract
Olive oil extraction generates large amounts of a highly pollutant by-product called olive cake (OC), and its use in ruminant feeding could be an alternative. This study was designed to evaluate the effects of partially replacing forage by crude OC (COC) in a mixed dairy diet on rumen fermentation and microbial populations in Rusitec fermenters. The COC replaced 33% of the forage (66% maize silage and 33% barley straw) and was included at 16.6% of the total diet. Four fermenters were used in a cross-over design with two 13-day incubation periods. Experimental diets had a 50:50 forage-to-concentrate ratio and were formulated to contain the same protein (16.0%) and neutral detergent fiber (32.5%) levels. Compared with control fermenters, those fed the COC diet showed greater (p ≤ 0.02) pH (6.07 vs. 6.22), diet disappearance (0.709 vs. 0.748), and butyrate proportions (18.0 vs. 19.4), but there were no differences in volatile fatty acids and ammonia production. Microbial growth, bacterial diversity, protozoal abundance, and relative abundance of fungi and archaea were unaffected by diet, although the solid phase of COC-fed fermenters showed greater (p = 0.01) bacterial abundance than control ones. Results indicate that COC could replace 33% of the forage in a mixed dairy diet.
Subject
General Veterinary,Animal Science and Zoology
Reference51 articles.
1. https://www.mapa.gob.es/estadistica/pags/anuario/2019-Avance/avance/AvAE19.pdf
2. Olive mill wastes: Biochemical characterizations and valorization strategies
3. Study of the effect of Saccharomyces cerevisiae on nutritional value of exhausted dry olive cake using in vitro gas production technique;Khosravifar;J. Anim. Vet. Adv.,2008
4. Olive by-products in animal feeding: Improvement and utilization;Amici;Options Méditerranéennes,1991
5. http://www.fao.org/3/X6545E/X6545E02.htm