Essential Oils in Nellore Beef Cattle: In Vivo Impact on Rumen Emissions

Author:

Benetel Gabriela1,Fagundes Gisele Maria2ORCID,de Méo-Filho Paulo3ORCID,Silva Thaysa dos Santos1,Welter Katiéli Caroline1,Melo Flávia Alves1,Lobo Annelise Aila Gomes1,Frighetto Rosa Toyoko Shiraishi4,Berndt Alexandre5ORCID,Muir James Pierre6,Bueno Ives Cláudio da Silva1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Animal Science, Universidade de São Paulo—USP, Av. Duque de Caxias Norte, 225, Pirassununga 13635-900, SP, Brazil

2. Department of Animal Science, Universidade Federal de Roraima—UFRR, BR 174, Km 12, Boa Vista 69300-000, RR, Brazil

3. Department of Animal Science, University of California—UC Davis, 1 Shields Ave, Davis, CA 95616, USA

4. Research and Development, Embrapa Meio Ambiente, Rod SP-340, Km 127, Jaguariúna 13820-000, SP, Brazil

5. Research and Development, Embrapa Pecuária Sudeste, Rod Washington Luiz, Km 23, São Carlos 13560-970, SP, Brazil

6. Texas A&M AgriLife Research, 1229 North U.S. Hwy 281, Stephenville, TX 76401, USA

Abstract

Essential oils (EOs), as rumen additives, decreased CH4 emissions in in vitro trials but results from in vivo studies are still limited. We investigated the effects of Origanum vulgare (OEO) and Thymus vulgaris (TEO) EOs on in vivo methane emissions from Nellore beef cattle. Six adult rumen-cannulated Nellore cattle were used in a double 3 × 3 Latin square design. Treatments consisted of three diets containing either 3 mL OEO per kg of concentrate, 3 mL TEO/kg of concentrate, or no EO addition. The experimental period consisted of three 21 d feeding periods and methane production was measured using the sulfur hexafluoride (SF6) technique from Day 16 to Day 21 of each feeding period. Intake, total apparent digestibility (dry matter as well as neutral and acid detergent fiber), and rumen parameters (pH, ammoniacal nitrogen concentration, and short-chain fatty acids) were also evaluated. The EOs did not decrease CH4 emissions and had no effect on rumen parameters.

Publisher

MDPI AG

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