Effects of a concentrate supplement on the intake and digestion of a low-quality forage by lambs
- 1 December 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in The Journal of Agricultural Science
- Vol. 111 (3) , 503-511
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0021859600083702
Abstract
Summary: Weaned lambs of mean weight 25 kg were offered a diet of mature oaten hay or hay supplemented with a pelleted mixture of oat grain and sunflower meal (2:1), at one of three rates, for 86 days. The effect of the supplement on the voluntary intake of hay was measured during the first 20 days when feed was offered twice daily (Expt 1), after which the effects on ruminal and post-ruminal digestion were investigated under continuous feeding conditions (Expt 2).In Expt 1 the first increment of supplement increased the total intake of organic matter (OM) but increasing the supplement further, up to 510 g D.M., had no additional effect. The voluntary intake of oaten hay was not significantly reduced by the lowest rate of supplementation but at higher rates was depressed at a mean rate of 92 g/100 g supplement. Rates of change in fasted weight on the four treatments were —63, —5, 21 and 45 g/day, respectively.In Expt 2, where the rates of hay intake were held at 85% of those achieved in Expt 1, the first increment of supplement increased the pool size of OM and cell wall components in the reticulorumen by about 50%. It also increased their outflow rates at the abomasum by 24% and 33%, respectively, but significantly decreased the fractional outflow rate and fractional digestion rate of cell wall components. Supplementation decreased the proportion of apparent OM digestion that occurred in the reticulo-rumen from 76% to 65%. The presence of supplement doubled the ammonia pool in the rumen and increased the abomasal flow on non-ammonia nitrogen (NAN) and microbial NAN by 70%. Estimates of the amounts of crude protein apparently digested in the intestines (DCPi) increased linearly with proportion of supplement in the diet. However, the apparent digestibility of the hay was decreased, rather than increased, by the supplement. Although higher rates of supplement did not significantly change the elevated rumen pools of OM and cell wall components, there was a consistent tendency for these to decrease.The results are consistent with the view that the intake of unsupplemented hay was limited by its low nitrogen content and the intake of supplemented hay may have been limited primarily by the capacity of the reticulo-rumen, although other factors were increasingly involved at higher rates of supplementation.This publication has 28 references indexed in Scilit:
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