Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2458613 | Small Ruminant Research | 2006 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
A continuous culture system, inoculated with rumen liquor from goats or sheep, was used to study fermentation characteristics of olive leaves (OL). The effects of adding polyethylene glycol (PEG 4000 MW; 0, 2 or 20 g/100 g OL) and/or supplementing with urea (U) or sunflower meal (SM) (1.0 g N/100 g OM) were also studied. Olive leaf fermentation promoted low VFA production (35.2 mmol/d), predominantly of acetic acid, and low efficiency of VFA production (4.91 mol/kg digestible carbohydrates, DCHO). Both values increased with N supplementation, but effects of PEG were variable. No differences ascribed to the rumen inoculum origin were observed. The ammonia N concentration was increased only by supplementation with U. Total and amino acid N output was low and increased with N addition, but it was not affected by PEG treatment. No differences ascribed to the inoculum origin were observed concerning microbial N production rate or efficiency (g N/kg DCHO). There was no clear difference between sources of supplementary N regarding bacterial protein synthesis. On the basis of PEG results, the effect of tannins on OL fermentation was not important.
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Authors
I. MartÃn GarcÃa, D. Yáñez Ruiz, A. Moumen, E. Molina Alcaide,