The Effect of Fat-Free Diets on Lambs and Goats
- 31 January 1954
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Journal of Animal Science
- Vol. 13 (1) , 265-273
- https://doi.org/10.2527/jas1954.131265x
Abstract
Weanling lambs were fed a fat-free diet for seven months without showing any skin lesions or other symptoms typical of a fat deficiency. Although analysis of rumen contents from these sheep indicated the presence of traces of linoleic and linolenic acids, the concentration of these acids declined as the experiment progressed. No arachidonic acid was detected in the rumen contents of sheep receiving fat-free or corn oil diets. Several bacteria were isolated from the rumen of a cow consuming a natural diet and grown on fat-free media. None of these bacteria were found to synthesize any of the “essential fatty acids”. A second experiment was undertaken to determine if two-day old lambs and goats require a dietary source of fat. Lambs which received a fat-free synthetic milk became weak and died within three to seven weeks while controls were raised successfully on the same milk with 2 percent added lard. Kids receiving fat-free diets showed symptoms identical to those displayed by lambs but died within one to three weeks. Other kids survived on a milk containing as little as 0.25 percent lard or 0.36 percent linoleic acid but not on a milk containing 0.05 percent lard. Copyright © . .This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Effect of Dietary Fat on the Reproductive Performance and the Mixed Fatty Acid Composition of Fat-Deficient RatsJournal of Nutrition, 1952
- The Physiological Effects of a Fat-Deficient Diet on the PigJournal of Animal Science, 1951
- The Essential Role of Fatty Acids in Rations for Growing ChicksJournal of Nutrition, 1950
- The nature of the fatty acids stored by the liver in the fat-deficiency disease of ratsBiochemical Journal, 1938