scholarly journals EFFECT OF DIETARY OREGANO, ROSEMARY AND PEPPERMINT AS FEED ADDITIVES ON NUTRIENTS DIGESTIBILITY, RUMEN FERMENTATION AND PERFORMANCE OF FATTENING SHEEP

2021 ◽  
Vol 24 (3) ◽  
pp. 365-376
Author(s):  
M. Farghaly ◽  
M. Abdullah
2019 ◽  
Vol 97 (Supplement_2) ◽  
pp. 136-137
Author(s):  
Allison VanDerWal ◽  
Josh Zeltwanger ◽  
Devan Paulus Compart ◽  
Alfredo DiCostanzo

Abstract Weaning and transit negatively affects DMI of newly received cattle. Restoring DMI is imperative to ensure rapid recovery and adequate response to immunological challenges. Eubiotics have the potential to increase DMI. The objective of this study was to evaluate effects of feeding a pre- and probiotic blend or a DFM-prebiotic blend on health and performance response by newly received crossbred cattle. Ninety-two Angus crossbred (Ranch 1) steers (n = 60; average BW 271 + 11 kg) and heifers (n = 32; Average BW 245 + 15 kg) and 89 Red Angus crossbred (Ranch 2) steers (average BW 264 + 11 kg), weaned immediately before trucking 1,520 km to the feedlot, were randomly allocated (5 to 7 hd/pen) within ranch and sex to one of 15 pens in each of two (north or south side) locations within a deep bedded confindment barn. Cattle were fed once daily for 49 d, orts were collected and weighed prior to feeding. Additives were incorporated daily into the total mixed ration as a premix using dried distillers grains. Performance data were analyzed using the MIXED procedure of SAS with pen and sex as random effects. Morbidity data were analyzed using PROC GLIMMIX of SAS. By day 7, cattle fed either additive tended (P < 0.10) to have greater DMI; this effect did not persist past 7 d. Cattle fed either microbial blend had heavier BW and ADG (P < 0.003) at day 28 and 49, which led to greater feed conversion efficiency (P < 0.03). Fewer (P = 0.001) cattle fed microbial blends were treated for BRD. Feeding either the prebiotic/probiotic blend or a DFM-prebiotic blend reduced morbidity and improved cattle performance during a 49-d receiving period.


1989 ◽  
Vol 39 (8-9) ◽  
pp. 793-797
Author(s):  
G. I. Kalachnyuk ◽  
M. Marounek ◽  
O. G. Savka ◽  
B. M. Leskovich

2014 ◽  
Vol 54 (3) ◽  
pp. 299 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Taghavi-Nezhad ◽  
D. Alipour ◽  
M. D. Flythe ◽  
P. Zamani ◽  
G. Khodakaramian

Gas (CO2 and CH4) and ammonia production in the rumen represent major sources of lost carbon and nitrogen, respectively. The essential oils of some plants have been shown to decrease gas and ammonia production by selectively inhibiting rumen microbes. Particularly, those of Zataria multiflora (ZEO; thymol 21%, carvacrol 32%) and Mentha spicata (SEO; carvone 55%) were evaluated in vitro as ruminant-feed additives. The experiments employed mixed rumen microbes and a hyper-ammonia-producing bacterium (HAP) isolated from the rumen of a Mehraban sheep. Both ZEO and SEO decreased in vitro fibre digestibility and also gas production by mixed rumen microbes that were fermenting a typical growing-lamb diet. ZEO decreased ammonia concentration in mixed culture of rumen microbes, but SEO exerted the opposite effect. A bacterial isolate (MT8) was obtained from the rumen of a Mehraban sheep, and the 16S rRNA gene sequence indicated that it was most closely related to Clostridium bifermentans. Isolate MT8 exhibited rapid ammonia production when peptides were the growth substrate, which indicated that MT8 was a HAP. Both oils inhibited the growth and ammonia production of isolate MT8. However, ZEO decreased ammonia production at lower doses, and to a greater degree, than did SEO. These results indicated that both essential oils could potentially be used to modulate rumen fermentation. The detrimental effects on fibre digestion could be problematic in high-forage diets, and this requires further investigation. Isolate MT8 is the first described HAP from the Mehraban sheep rumen. Results on ammonia production by isolate MT8 and mixed rumen microbes indicate differential mode of action of each oil on this parameter.


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