Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2448824 Livestock Science 2006 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

In vivo digestibility (eight animals) and solid particles passage rate measured by faecal Cr (four animals fistulated at the rumen) were determined on riverine buffalo bulls and Delle Langhe rams, given four diets at maintenance level (50 g/kg M0.75 per day of dry matter), according to a Latin square design, composed of a factorial combination of high and low NDF and of high and low protein undegradability. The diets were: L-30 = low NDF (530.0 g/kg DM), low undegradability of protein (29.6%, CP = 138.0 g/kg DM); L-40 = low NDF (537.0 g/kg DM), high undegradability of protein (41.0%, CP = 139.0 g/kg DM); H-30 = high NDF (583.0 g/kg DM), low undegradability of protein (28.3%, CP = 128.0 g/kg DM); H-40 = high NDF (NDF = 580.0 g/kg DM), high undegradability of protein (40.0%, CP = 128.0 g/kg DM). The digestibility of organic matter (66.68% vs. 64.32%, P < 0.05) and of the other analytical fractions (NSC, NDF, cellulose and hemicelluloses) was significantly higher in buffaloes with the exception of that of crude protein which was similar for the two species. Considering the diets within the species, the increased undegradable protein in the small intestine produces different effects: in the buffalo, it does not positively influence the digestibility of NSC but does increase that of cellulose, on the other hand in sheep it influences the digestibility of NSC. The post-ruminal digestibility of the undegraded protein, both in buffalo and sheep, is higher than that from protein of microbial origin. The passage rate of the marker of the solid particles, through the first compartment, k1 (2.86% h− 1 and 2.54% h− 1 for the buffalo and the sheep) and through the entire intestinal tract, MRT (57.50 and 58.88 h for the buffalo and the sheep) does not show significant differences in the two species. The passage rate of the marker of the solid particles in buffalo rumen, at variance with the structural carbohydrates of the diet, is more variable compared with that of the sheep.

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Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Animal Science and Zoology
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