Effects of high condensed-tannin substrate, prior dietary tannin exposure, antimicrobial inclusion, and animal species on fermentation parameters following a 48 h in vitro incubation

التفاصيل البيبلوغرافية
العنوان: Effects of high condensed-tannin substrate, prior dietary tannin exposure, antimicrobial inclusion, and animal species on fermentation parameters following a 48 h in vitro incubation
المؤلفون: A N, Hoehn, E C, Titgemeyer, T G, Nagaraja, J S, Drouillard, M D, Miesner, K C, Olson
المصدر: Journal of animal science. 96(1)
سنة النشر: 2017
مصطلحات موضوعية: Rumen, Sheep, Anti-Infective Agents, Goats, Fermentation, Animals, Cattle, Proanthocyanidins, Animal Feed, Ruminant Nutrition, Anti-Bacterial Agents, Diet
الوصف: Condensed tannins (CT), prior dietary CT exposure, animal species, and antimicrobial inclusion effects on 48 h extent of in vitro fermentation were measured in an experiment with a 3 × 2 × 2 × 3 factorial arrangement of treatments. Treatments included species of inoculum donor (Bos taurus, Ovis aries, or Capra hircus; n = 3/species), prior adaptation to dietary CT (not adapted or adapted), culture substrate (low-CT or high-CT), and antimicrobial additive (none, bacterial suppression with penicillin + streptomycin, or fungal suppression with cycloheximide). Low-CT or high-CT substrates were incubated in vitro using inoculum from animals either not exposed (period 1) or previously exposed to dietary CT (period 2). The extent of IVDMD after 48 h of incubation was greater (P < 0.001) for cultures with low-CT substrate (21.5%) than for cultures with high-CT substrate (16.5%). Cultures with high-CT substrate or with suppressed bacterial activity had less (P < 0.001) gas pressure than cultures with low-CT substrate or cultures with suppressed fungal activity. Total VFA concentrations were greater (P < 0.001) in low-CT cultures when inoculum donors were without prior CT exposure (83.7 mM) than when inoculum was from CT-exposed animals (79.6 mM). Conversely, total VFA concentrations were greater (P < 0.001) in high-CT cultures with tannin-exposed inoculum (59.4 mM) than with nonexposed inoculum (52.6 mM). As expected, CT and suppression of bacterial fermentative activities had strong negative effects on fermentation; however, prior exposure to dietary CT attenuated some negative effects of dietary CT on fermentation. In our experiment, the magnitude of inoculum-donor species effects on fermentation was minor.
تدمد: 1525-3163
URL الوصول: https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=pmid________::90a7754840de0d72e734558cc035d209
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29365124
حقوق: OPEN
رقم الأكسشن: edsair.pmid..........90a7754840de0d72e734558cc035d209
قاعدة البيانات: OpenAIRE