Differential passage rates and digestion of neutral detergent fiber from grain and forages in 30, 60 and 90% concentrate diets fed to steers.
- 1 January 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Journal of Animal Science
- Vol. 68 (9) , 2965-2973
- https://doi.org/10.2527/1990.6892965x
Abstract
Six ruminally cannulated steers were used to determine the effects of altering dietary concentrates on fiber digestion. Diets contained 30, 60 or 90% of a concentrate based on flaked sorghum grain plus a 50:50 mixture of wheat straw and alfalfa hay. Total tract digestibility of NDF was not altered, but digestibility of potentially digested NDF (PDF) decreased (P less than .05) from 92 to 48% as concentrates increased from 30 to 90% of diet DM. Ruminal passage rate for straw (3.4 and 3.0%/h) and for hay (4.6 and 4.7%/h) was unchanged when concentrate was increased from 30 to 60%, but it decreased by 28 (2.2%/h) and 13% (4.1%/h), respectively (P less than .05), when concentrates were increased to 90%. Passage rate for grain (5.3, 5.1 and 4.4%/h) and fluid (9.3, 10.0 and 8.2%/h) was not influenced by concentrate percentage. Calculated ruminal digestibilities of NDF in individual ingredients did not differ between 30 and 60% concentrates, but they decreased (P less than .05) by 72, 57 and 34% for straw, hay and grain when concentrate was increased to 90%. Because of their relative contribution to total diet NDF, straw, hay and grain accounted for 28, 18 and 54% of the total decrease in estimated fiber digestion. It is concluded that PDF as well as NDF should be evaluated in studies of concentrate effects on fiber digestion, and that dietary concentrate level has more influence on passage rate of low-quality forage than on passage rate of grain or high-quality forage. In 90% concentrate diets, although fiber digestibility was depressed more for forage than for grain, grain accounted for most of the depression in fiber digestion because grain was the primary source of dietary fiber. Copyright © . .This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
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