scholarly journals 399 The 25-hydroxyvitamin D3 supplementation improves animal performance of Nellore cattle grazed in tropical grass

2019 ◽  
Vol 97 (Supplement_3) ◽  
pp. 161-161
Author(s):  
Vinicius N Gouvêa ◽  
Guilherme S Vasconcellos ◽  
Tiago S Acedo ◽  
Luis Fernando Tamassia

Abstract The objective was to evaluate the effects of 25-hydroxyvitamin D3 (HyD®) supplementation on performance and carcass characteristics of grazing Nellore beef cattle. Eighty finishing Nellore bulls were equally distributed according initial BW (437 ± 4.93 kg) in ten Brachiaria brizantha cv. Xaraés paddocks (8 bulls per paddock) using a randomized complete block design with five replicates (paddocks) per treatment. Experiment was conducted in two phases during dry season, from August to November 2017. Phase 1 consisted in all animals receiving the same basal concentrate for 33 days. In phase 2, animals received the treatments for the following 63 days: 1) Control (basal concentrate, no HyD®) or 2) HyD (basal concentrate + 1mg of HyD®/bull/day). The basal concentrate (18% CP and 80% TDN) was formulated to have 82.0% ground corn, 12.0% soybean meal and 6.0% mineral-vitamin supplement (as % DM), being daily offered to bulls at 7.0 kg/animal/day in collective feeders located at each paddock. Final BW (FBW) and average daily gain (ADG) were evaluated for phase 1, 2 and total period, while supplement intake, hot carcass weight (HCW) and dressing percentage was evaluated for total period only. Mineral-vitamin supplement and HyD® were provided by DSM Nutritional Products. Data were analyzed using the MIXED procedure of SAS® 9.3, with each paddock considered one experimental unit and values declared significant when P < 0.10. There was no treatment effect on phase 1 in FBW and ADG, as expected. In phase 2, treatment effects were observed for HyD in FBW (562.75 vs. 568.70; P = 0.094) and ADG (1.350 vs. 1.437 kg/day; P = 0.029) over the control group, respectively. Moreover, the total period ADG was greater for HyD treatment (1.311 vs. 1.375; P = 0.095). No effects were observed in carcass characteristics and concentrate intake. In conclusion, HyD® improves animal performance of Nellore beef cattle grazed in tropical conditions.

2019 ◽  
Vol 97 (Supplement_3) ◽  
pp. 392-392
Author(s):  
Guilherme S Vasconcellos ◽  
Alexandre Perdigão ◽  
Tiago S Acedo ◽  
Victor V Carvalho ◽  
Luis Fernando Tamassia

Abstract The objective was to evaluate the effects of feeding levels of an exogenous carbohydrases blend on performance and carcass characteristics of grazing Nellore beef cattle. A total of 168 bulls were distributed to twenty Brachiaria brizantha cv. Xaraés paddocks (8 or 10 animals/paddock) in a randomized complete block design, with five replicates (paddocks) per treatment. Bulls were assigned according initial BW (IBW; 369.07±21.13 kg) to receive treatments for 231 days: 1) Control (basal mineral-protein-energetic supplement, no enzyme; PES), Carb1 (PES + 0.83 g of xylanase, RONOZYME® WX; and 3.09 g of beta-glucanase, RONOZYME® VP, both offered/kg PES), Carb2 (PES + 1.65 g of xylanase and 6.18 g of beta-glucanase/kg PES) and Carb3 (PES + 3.30 g of xylanase and 12.38 g of beta-glucanase/kg PES). Evaluated parameters were final BW (FBW), average daily gain (ADG), supplement intake, hot carcass weight (HCW) and dressing %. IBW and FBW were measured after a 12-hour fastening period. Treatments were offered daily in covered group feeders located in each paddock. Animals had free access to supplements and water. Supplements and enzymes were provided by DSM Nutritional Products. Data were analyzed using MIXED procedure of SAS® 9.3, being each paddock the experimental unit. Orthogonal contrasts were used to detect linear and quadratic effects on enzyme levels, with values P ≤ 0.05 considered significant. No linear or quadratic effects (P > 0.05) were observed on supplement intake (2.11 kg/animal/d), FBW (492.03 kg) and ADG (0.532 kg/day). However, a quadratic effect was observed for HCW and dressing %, with animals fed Carb1 presenting 5.69 kg heavier carcass (272.67 vs. 266.98; P = 0.039) and 1.4 p.p. higher dressing % (55.3% vs. 53.9%, P < 0.001) compared with control group. In conclusion, to use carbohydrases enzyme blend improves carcass characteristics and is an interesting technology for Nellore beef cattle grazed in tropical conditions.


2019 ◽  
Vol 97 (10) ◽  
pp. 4242-4247 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ricardo Gonzalez-Esquerra ◽  
Raquel B Araujo ◽  
Douglas Haese ◽  
Joao L Kill ◽  
Anderson F Cunha ◽  
...  

Abstract Two performance studies were conducted to investigate the effects of 3 different sources of Cu on production parameters of piglets. A total of 256 piglets weaned at 24 ± 2 d were randomly allocated into 4 treatments with 10 or 8 replicates per treatment of 4 or 3 piglets per pen in Exp. 1 and 2, respectively. The experimental period was divided into 3 feeding phases: Phase 1 (24 to 35 d), Phase 2 (36 to 49 d), and Phase 3 (50 to 70 d). Treatments included a Control group (fed 10 mg/kg of Cu from CuSO4), a group fed 160 mg/kg of either CuSO4 (CuSO4-160) or tri-basic copper chloride (TBCC), and a group fed Cu methionine hydroxy analogue chelated (Cu-MHAC) at 150, 80, and 50 mg/kg in Phases 1, 2, and 3, respectively. The methionine value of Cu-MHAC was accounted during diet formulation to achieve the same levels of methionine across treatments. Phases 1 and 2 diets contained 2,200 and 1,500 ppm of ZnO, respectively; and antibiotics were used as growth promoters. Performance parameters were analyzed as completely randomized block design, in which each experiment was considered as a block. In trial 2, blood serum and mucosal samples, from the fundic region of the stomach, were collected from 1 piglet per replicate at day 70 and tested for serum growth hormone levels (GH) and ghrelin mRNA expression, respectively. The contrast between Cu-MHAC vs. CuSO4-160 + TBCC showed that piglets fed Cu-MHAC exhibited better feed conversion ratio (FCR) in all feeding phases compared with feeding inorganic Cu (P < 0.05). Overall, feeding Cu-MHAC improved body weight (BW), BW gain, feed intake (FI), and FCR vs. Control diet fed piglets; yet, it improved BW and FCR vs. TBCC fed piglets, and improved BW, BW gain, and FI vs. CuSO4-160 fed piglets (P < 0.05). Feeding TBCC promoted similar performance than feeding CuSO4-160, regardless of age (P > 0.05). Both ghrelin expression and growth hormone serum levels were significantly increased by feeding Cu-MHAC vs. Control diet fed animals (P < 0.01). Feeding CuSO4-160 upregulated ghrelin expression vs. Control (P < 0.01) while GH serum levels and ghrelin expression did no change by feeding TBCC compared with Control diet fed animals (P > 0.05). It was concluded that feeding Cu-MHAC at the levels tested herein can improve growth performance of piglets beyond feeding 160 ppm of either CuSO4 or TBCC, which may be partially explained by the increased expression of ghrelin and GH serum levels.


2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (9) ◽  
pp. 272
Author(s):  
Milena Barretta Franceschetti ◽  
Leandro Galon ◽  
Maico André Michelon Bagnara ◽  
Renan Pawelkiewicz ◽  
Leonardo Brunetto ◽  
...  

Among the factors which affect crop productivity, there are weeds which compete for environment resources. The objective of this work was to determine the periods of interference of alexandergrass on the morphophysiology and productivity components of black beans. The experiment was conducted in a complete randomized block design with four replications. The bean cultivar of the black type used was IPR Uirapuru, being the treatments separated in two models of interference: in the coexistence group, the crop of the bean lived with the alexandergrass by growing periods of 0, 7, 14, 21, 28, 35, 42 and throughout the cycledays after emergence and throughout the cycle; in the control group the crop was kept free of the infestation for the same periods described previously. At 42 DAE were evaluated the variables related to plant morphology and physiology (height of bean plants, number of trifoliate leaves, dry mass plant, number of grains pods, number od pods plants, stomatal conductance, internal CO2 concentration, photosynthetic activity, efficiency of carboxylation, efficient use of water, transpiration rate). Considering the results, it is possible to conclude that the critical period of interference prevention (CPIP) comprises 24 to 50 DAE, the period before the interference (PBI) was 24 DAE and the total period of interference prevention (TPIP) was 50 days and that the morphological and physiological variables of the plants were negatively affected in the coexistence with the alexandergrass when compared to the treatments kept free of weeds throughout the crop cycle.


2008 ◽  
Vol 48 (5) ◽  
pp. 608 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. G. Holroyd ◽  
V. J. Doogan ◽  
M. R. Jeffery ◽  
J. A. Lindsay ◽  
B. K. Venus ◽  
...  

This experiment tested the hypothesis that relocating cattle is detrimental to their growth. The study examined the effect of having relocated cattle mixed with, or segregated from, the local acclimatised cattle at the destination property. Bos indicus cross steers (120) were allocated to three groups and were relocated, in two separate cohorts, 980 km from northern Queensland to improved pastures in central Queensland. At the start of Phase 1, the control group (C) was moved 3 months before the other two groups. The remaining two groups grazed native pastures; one group was supplemented (SR) to increase growth rate similar to that expected from improved pasture in central Queensland and the other was not supplemented (R). At the end of Phase 1, C was significantly (P < 0.05) heavier than SR, which was significantly (P < 0.05) heavier than R. At the start of Phase 2, the SR and R groups were relocated and after transportation the R and SR groups lost 12 kg or 4.4% of liveweight and 18 kg or 5.7% of liveweight, respectively; this weight loss was recovered after 5 days. All steers were reallocated to segregated (SEG) or mixed (MIX) treatment groups forming six treatments (SEG.C, SEG.R and SEG.SR and MIX.C, MIX.R and MIX.SR). There were no significant differences in liveweights within the SEG treatments by 57 days or within the MIX treatments by 106 days after relocation. There were few if any significant differences in the plasma constituents and differential leucocyte counts of the steers and most results were within physiologically normal ranges. We conclude on the basis of these results and of other experiments that the anecdotal poor performance of cattle after relocation appears to be unfounded.


2009 ◽  
Vol 23 (8) ◽  
pp. 784-791 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gail L. Widener ◽  
Diane D. Allen ◽  
Cynthia Gibson-Horn

Background. Torso weighting has sometimes been effective for improving upright mobility in people with multiple sclerosis, but parameters for weighting have been inconsistent. Objective. To determine whether balance-based torso weighting (BBTW) has immediate effects on upright mobility in people with multiple sclerosis. Methods. This was a 2-phase randomized clinical trial. In phase 1, 36 participants were randomly assigned to experimental and control groups. In phase 2, the control group was subsequently randomized into 2 groups with alternate weight-placement. Tests of upright mobility included: timed up and go (TUG), sharpened Romberg, 360-degree turns, 25-foot walk, and computerized platform posturography. Participants were tested at baseline and again with weights placed according to group membership. In both phases, a physical therapist assessed balance for the BBTW group and then placed weights to decrease balance loss. In phase 1, the control group had no weights placed. In phase 2, the alternate treatment group received standard weight placement of 1.5% body weight. Results. People with BBTW showed a significant improvement in the 25-foot walk ( P = .01) over those with no weight, and the TUG ( P = .01) over those with standard weight placement. BBTW participants received an average of 0.5 kg, less than 1.5% of any participant’s body weight. Conclusion. BBTW can have immediate advantages over a nonweighted condition for gait velocity and over a standardized weighted condition for a functional activity in people with multiple sclerosis (MS) who are ambulatory but have balance and mobility abnormalities.


2019 ◽  
Vol 97 (Supplement_2) ◽  
pp. 229-230
Author(s):  
Peter J Lammers ◽  
Chad A Stahl ◽  
Mark S Honeyman

Abstract A 2 × 2 × 2 factorial design was used to compare the effect of SID Lys:ME concentration (current vs. reduced), stocking density (1.30 vs. 4.05 m2/pig), and harvest month (August vs. March) on pigs raised in bedded hoop barns in Western Iowa. For each harvest month, 420 pigs produced from the mating of Duroc boars (Choice Genetics; West Des Moines, IA) to Camborough females (PIC; Hendersonville, TN) were sorted into 12 pens. Six pens were inside 3 large-scale (9.1 × 18.3 m) hoop barns and were stocked with 64 pigs/pen (32 barrows and 32 gilts; 1.30 m2/ pig). Six pens were inside 3 small-scale (6.0 × 10.8 m) hoop barns and were stocked with 6 pigs/pen (3 barrows and 3 gilts; 4.05 m2/pig). Within each stocking density, pens were randomly assigned to 1 of 2 diets which were fed in 2 phases. Corn-soybean meal diets were formulated to deliver 2.94 or 2.34 g SID Lys per Mcal ME in phase 1 (72.6–95.0 kg) and 2.34 or 1.76 g SID Lys per Mcal ME in phase 2 (> 95.0 kg). Pigs were individually weighed every 28 days and feed disappearance was recorded. When pigs in a pen averaged 129.3 kg the entire pen of pigs were harvested. A single chop (last-rib location; 2.54 cm thick) was collected from each carcass to assess pork quality. Pigs harvested in the summer grew faster, more efficiently, and with more intramuscular fat than those harvested in winter (P-value ≤ 0.05) but had lower 10th rib pH (P-value < 0.0001). Pigs allotted 4.05 m2/pig grew more efficiently but had reduced last rib pH as compared to pigs stocked at 1.30 m2/pig (P-value < 0.05). Reducing SID Lys:ME did not impact growth performance or carcass characteristics (P-value > 0.10). Lower concentrations of SID Lys:ME may be adequate for pigs housed in bedded hoop barns but further study is warranted.


2020 ◽  
Vol 25 (Supplement_2) ◽  
pp. e3-e3
Author(s):  
Michael Chang ◽  
Alicia Fernandes ◽  
Alexandra Frankel

Abstract Background Patients undergoing procedures at hospitals may experience anxiety and such anxiety can be heightened in pediatric populations. Anxiety can invoke a physical and mental stress response leading to poorer health outcomes and in children these outcomes include: resistance to treatment, nightmares, longer recovery periods, lowered pain thresholds and separation anxiety (Biddis, 2014; Manyande 2015; Aydın 2017). Objectives This study aimed to test whether a virtual reality intervention is feasible, beneficial and effective in reducing anxiety prior to surgery in the pediatric population of Scarborough Health Network. Design/Methods Virtual Reality (VR) is a computer technology that simulates a user’s physical presence in a virtual or imaginary environment. ‘Bubble Bloom’, an underwater fishing game where participants launch bubbles to catch colourful fish, is the VR game that the children are administered in a two phased research design to explore whether the VR intervention was a beneficial tool in reducing anxiety in our pediatric population. Phase 1 was a trial phase in which participants (n=20) were administered the condensed version of the State Trait Anxiety Scale before and after the intervention to determine if anxiety levels had been reduced. Participants were also administered an experience survey to explore patient satisfaction, headset comfort, and virtual reality satisfaction. Phase 2, randomized control trial, is currently ongoing with the same measures and VR intervention being administered. In Phase 2, participants are randomized to the control group (regular play activities) or intervention (virtual reality game). Results In Phase 1, all participants indicated they enjoyed the experience of the virtual reality intervention. Sixteen of the 20 participants had pre scores that were in the mild to moderate anxiety range (80%). Of these 16 participants, 10 participants’ post scores decreased to the normal or no anxiety range (63%). Additionally, 80% of participants demonstrated a reduction in anxiety post-virtual reality intervention. Conclusion Phase 1 results were encouraging with 80% of participants experiencing a reduction in anxiety and all participants enjoying the virtual reality experience.


2021 ◽  
Vol 99 (Supplement_3) ◽  
pp. 286-286
Author(s):  
Lauren M Mayer ◽  
Kevin Martens ◽  
Loni W Lucherk ◽  
Ty E Lawrence ◽  
Travis C Tennant

Abstract Heifers (n = 1,394; 291 ± 9.9 kg) were used to test the effects of a direct-fed microbial (10-G) on live growth performance and carcass characteristics. Heifers were blocked by arrival day and randomly allocated to treatment (0 or 2g/animal/d; CON and 10-G, respectively) in a randomized complete block design with ten pens per treatment. Heifers were fed for an average of 192 days. Growth and carcass outcomes were analyzed using mixed models with pen as experimental unit and block as random effect. Dry matter intake (P = 0.63), average daily gain (P = 0.69), gain:feed (P = 0.95) and final body weight (P = 0.79) did not differ between treatments. Neither deads and removals (P = 0.52) nor first or second treatment morbidity rates (P ≥ 0.84) were different between treatments. Hot carcass weight (P = 0.19), dressed carcass yield (P = 0.33), 12th rib fat depth (P = 0.73), ribeye area (P = 0.13), calculated empty body fat (P = 0.71) or marbling score (P = 0.20) were not different between treatments. Yield grade distributions did not differ between treatments (P ≥ 0.44), however cattle fed 10-G tended (P = 0.09; 15.78 vs 20.34%) to be represented by fewer USDA Select carcasses. Livers from cattle fed 10-G tended (P = 0.10; 1.02 vs 2.19%) to have a lower frequency of abscesses when compared to CON. Heifers fed 10-G also had fewer (P &lt; 0.05; 5.27 vs 8.51%) severe liver abscesses. These results suggest that supplementing fed beef heifers with 10-G decreased rates of severe liver abscesses without altering live animal performance or carcass characteristics.


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