Department of Animal Science, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14850.
Department of Animal Sciences, University of Florida, Gainesville 32611.
J Dairy Sci. 2019 Apr;102(4):3036-3052. doi: 10.3168/jds.2018-15448. Epub 2019 Jan 17.
The objective of this study was to evaluate the effect of a fermentation by-product on rumen function, microbial yield, and composition and flows of nutrients from the rumen in high-producing lactating dairy cattle. Eight ruminally cannulated multiparous Holstein cows averaging (mean ± standard deviation) 60 ± 10 d in milk and 637 ± 38 kg of body weight were randomly assigned to 1 of 2 treatment sequences in a switchback design. Treatment diets contained (dry matter basis) 44% corn silage, 13% alfalfa silage, 12% ground corn, and 31% protein premix, containing either a control mix of urea and wheat middlings (CON) or a commercial fermentation by-product meal (Fermenten, Arm and Hammer Animal Nutrition, Princeton, NJ) at 3% diet inclusion rate (EXP). The trial consisted of three 28-d experimental periods, where each period consisted of 21 d of diet adaptation and 7 d of data and sample collection. A triple-marker technique and double-labeled NN-urea were used to were used to measure protozoal, bacterial, and nonmicrobial omasal flow of AA. Rumen pool sizes and omasal flows were used to determine digestion parameters, including fractional rates of carbohydrate digestion, microbial growth, and yield of microbial biomass per gram of degraded substrate. Fermentation by-product inclusion in EXP diets increased microbial N and amino acid N content in microbes relative to microbes from CON cows fed the urea control. Microbial AA profile did not differ between diets. Daily omasal flows of AA were increased in EXP cows as a result of decreased degradation of feed protein. The inclusion of the fermentation by-product increased nonmicrobial AA flow in cows fed EXP versus CON. Average protozoal contribution to microbial N flow was 16.8%, yet protozoa accounted for 21% of the microbial AA flow, with a range of 8 to 46% for individual AA. Cows in this study maintained an average rumen pool size of 320 g of microbial N, and bacterial and protozoal pools were estimated at 4 different theoretical levels of selective protozoa retention. Fractional growth rate of all microbes was estimated to be 0.069 h, with a yield of 0.44 g of microbial biomass per gram of carbohydrate degraded. Results indicated that fermentation by-product can increase omasal flow of AA while maintaining adequate rumen N available for microbial growth and protein synthesis. Simulations from a developmental version of the Cornell Net Carbohydrate and Protein System indicated strong agreement between predicted and observed values, with some areas key for improvement in AA flow and bacterial versus protozoal N partitioning.
本研究旨在评估一种发酵副产品对高产泌乳奶牛瘤胃功能、微生物产量以及瘤胃养分流量和组成的影响。8 头瘤胃瘘管的经产荷斯坦奶牛,平均泌乳天数(均值±标准差)为 60±10d,体重为 637±38kg,采用反转设计随机分为 2 种处理序列中的 1 种。处理日粮含有(干物质基础)44%玉米青贮、13%苜蓿青贮、12%粉碎玉米和 31%蛋白质预混料,分别含有对照组的尿素和小麦麸(CON)或商业发酵副产品饲料(Fermenten,Arm and Hammer Animal Nutrition,Princeton,NJ),添加量为 3%日粮(EXP)。试验分为 3 个 28d 试验期,每个试验期包括 21d 的日粮适应期和 7d 的数据和样品采集期。采用三重标记技术和双标记 NN-尿素测定原虫、细菌和非微生物瘤胃 AA 流量。瘤胃液池大小和瘤胃流量用于确定消化参数,包括碳水化合物消化的分数率、微生物生长和每克降解底物的微生物生物量产量。与对照组奶牛相比,EXP 日粮中添加发酵副产品增加了微生物 N 和微生物氨基酸 N 含量。日粮之间的微生物 AA 谱没有差异。由于饲料蛋白降解减少,EXP 奶牛的 AA 瘤胃流量增加。与对照组相比,EXP 奶牛中非微生物 AA 流量增加。在这项研究中,平均每头奶牛的瘤胃液池大小为 320g 微生物 N,细菌和原虫池分别估计为 4 种不同选择性原虫保留理论水平。所有微生物的分数生长率估计为 0.069h,每克碳水化合物降解产生 0.44g 微生物生物量。结果表明,发酵副产品可以增加 AA 的瘤胃流量,同时保持足够的微生物生长和蛋白质合成所需的瘤胃 N。康奈尔净碳水化合物和蛋白质系统的一个开发版本的模拟表明,预测值与观察值之间具有很强的一致性,在 AA 流量和细菌与原虫 N 分配方面存在一些需要改进的关键领域。