Thein vitrodigested cell wall and fermentation characteristics of grasses as affected by temperature and humidity during their growth
- 1 February 1977
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in The Journal of Agricultural Science
- Vol. 88 (1) , 217-222
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0021859600033979
Abstract
Total cell wall, in vitro digested cell wall and fermentation-gas production were determined in the separated tops and stubble of five tropical and two temperate grass species grown under controlled temperatures and humidities. As the day/night temperatures increased from 18/10 to 25/17 °C the total cell wall and in vitro digested cell wall increased. With a further increase to 32/24 °C the total cell wall increased, but not the in vitro digested cell wall. In vitro digested cell-wall values were also calculated from a previously derived relationship between in vitro digested cell wall and total cell wall. The differences between observed and calculated values increased (negatively) with increasing growth temperature suggesting that the in vitro digested cell wall was depressed with increasing growth temperatures, but the extent of this depression was small.In vitro gas production from the fermentation of plant tops or stubble in buffered rumen fluid for 24 h was significantly affected by growth temperature and humidity, apparently because of changes in chemical composition induced by the treatments. The volume of gas produced between 24 and 48 h fermentation times was appreciably lower from stubble than from plant tops and this was thought to be due to a higher resistance of part of the cell wall of stubble to digestion by rumen bacteria. Gas production in this period was slightly lower in the tops of grasses grown at the lower temperatures, but this could have been an indirect effect from an associated decrease in the total cell wall.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- Temperature and atmospheric humidity effects on cell wall content and dry matter digestibility of some tropical and temperate grassesNew Zealand Journal of Agricultural Research, 1976
- The relative importance of the total cell wall and quantity of digested cell wall in the regulation of the voluntary intake of grass hays by sheepThe Journal of Agricultural Science, 1975
- The constancy of the digested cell wall in grassThe Journal of Agricultural Science, 1974
- The relationship between in vitro digestible cell wall and the cell-wall content of forageThe Journal of Agricultural Science, 1973
- Temperature influences on the in vitro digestibility and soluble carbohydrate accumulation of tropical and temperate grassesAustralian Journal of Agricultural Research, 1973
- The voluntary intake, digestibility, and retention time by sheep of leaf and stem fractions of five grassesAustralian Journal of Agricultural Research, 1973
- 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
- Influence of Photoperiod and Thermoperiod on the IVDMD and Cell Wall Components of Tall Fescue1Crop Science, 1971
- Temperature influences on the growth, digestibility, and carbohydrate compositions of two tropical grasses, Panicum maximum var Trichoglume and Setaria sphacelata, and two cultivars of the temperate grass Lolium perenneAustralian Journal of Agricultural Research, 1971