An assessment of the quality of forage from its cell-wall content and amount of cell wall digested
- 1 June 1972
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in The Journal of Agricultural Science
- Vol. 78 (3) , 355-362
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0021859600026241
Abstract
SUMMARY Grasses and legumes comprising poor to good quality temperate and tropical species were fed to either cattle or sheep in 36 digestibility experiments. Cell wall in these forages was the ash-free and protein-free residue after sequential extraction with acidpepsin, organic solvents and either water for grasses or ammonium oxalate for legumes. The average amount of cell wall digested per 100 g forage OM was 40·0±0·59 g in grasses and 19·8±1·85 g in legumes. It was considered that within grasses and within legumes the physiology of ruminant digestion, rather than forage quality, was the main determinant of the average amount of cell wall digested and the difference between grasses and legumes was due to interaction of the ruminant digestion process with the physical structure of the cell wall. Of forage factors governing variation about the physiological average, the total cell wall had some effect on the amount of cell wall digested, but the lignin concentration in the cell wall had no effect. Among grasses and legumes the average, apparently undigested, protein-free non-cell-wall component was 6·2±0·13 g per 100 g forage OM. This component and digestible protein relative to total protein varied among different sets of data. It was concluded that only the component of digestible organic matter which was governed by the relative proportions of cell walls and cellular contents was predictable from chemical composition. It was considered that selection in plant breeding should be based on both digestible cell wall and cell-wall content instead of digestible organic matter.Keywords
This publication has 11 references indexed in Scilit:
- The effect of different extraction procedures on the recovery of cell walls in forage and faeces from cattle and sheepThe Journal of Agricultural Science, 1972
- In vivo and in vitro digestible fractions in forageJournal of the Science of Food and Agriculture, 1971
- THE DIGESTIBILITY OF STRUCTURAL CARBOHYDRATES OF GRASSES BY RUMEN MICRO-ORGANISMS IN VITROGrass and Forage Science, 1969
- Development of a Comprehensive System of Feed Analyses and its Application to ForagesJournal of Animal Science, 1967
- The evaluation of artificially dried grass as a source of energy for sheep:I. The effect of stage of maturity on the apparent digestibility of rye-grass, cocksfoot and timothyThe Journal of Agricultural Science, 1964
- The relationship between the cell-wall constituents of roughages and the digestibility of the organic matterThe Journal of Agricultural Science, 1962
- Relationship between the Concentrations of Crude Protein and Apparently Digestible Protein in ForagesJournal of Animal Science, 1959
- The comprehensive analysis of grassesJournal of the Science of Food and Agriculture, 1959
- THE LABORATORY DRYING OF HERBAGE AND FAECES, AND DRY MATTER LOSSES POSSIBLE DURING DRYINGGrass and Forage Science, 1954
- The Factorization of the Protein Requirements of Ruminants and of the Protein Values of Feeds, with Particular Reference to the Significance of the Metabolic Fecal NitrogenJournal of Animal Science, 1948