Effects of Sodium Butyrate Supplementation in Milk on the Growth Performance and Intestinal Microbiota of Preweaning Holstein Calves

Author:

Wu Donglin1ORCID,Zhang Zhanhe1ORCID,Shao Kai1,Wang Xing1,Huang Fudong1,Qi Jingwei12ORCID,Duan Yizong3,Jia Yang1ORCID,Xu Ming12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. College of Animal Science, Inner Mongolia Agricultural University, Hohhot 010018, China

2. Inner Mongolia Herbivorous Livestock Feed Engineering and Technology Research Center, Hohhot 010018, China

3. Shazhou Dairy Co., Ltd., Ulanqab 013750, China

Abstract

The aim of the present study was to investigate the effects of sodium butyrate (SB) supplementation on the growth and intestinal microbiota of preweaning dairy calves. Eighty newborn Holstein calves (56 female and 24 male) were randomly allocated to four treatment groups with 20 calves each (14 female and 6 male). The suckling milk for the four treatments was supplemented with 0, 4.4, 8.8, or 17.6 g/d SB. During the 6-week experiment, dry matter intake was recorded daily, body weight was measured weekly, and rectal fecal samples were collected in the 2nd week. The V3–V4 hypervariable regions of the microbial 16S rRNA were amplified and then sequenced. SB supplementation elevated average daily gains (ADGs) in the first and second weeks. The optimal SB supplementation level for the whole preweaning period was 8.78 g/d, as revealed by analyzing the whole preweaning period ADG using second-order polynomial regression (quadratic) equations. The alpha diversity (Shannon diversity index), beta diversity, core phyla and genera, and function of the intestinal microbiota were affected by SB supplementation. In addition, the Shannon diversity index and core phyla and genera of the intestinal microbiota were correlated with calf growth-related indices. Overall, SB supplementation in suckling milk improved the growth performance and intestinal microbiota development of dairy calves in a quadratic manner, and regression analysis indicated an optimal supplementation level of 8.78 g/d.

Funder

Science and Technology Major Project of Inner Mongolia

Science and Technology Program Funded Project of Hohhot

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Veterinary,Animal Science and Zoology

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