نتایج جستجو برای: ruminal and fecal ph

تعداد نتایج: 16861764  

2009
A. L. Goetsch F. N. Owens C. E. Kautz K. W. Milliner

Mature Angus steers were intraruminally infused with base to increase ruminal pH. Base infusions, increasing rumen pH from 5.8 to 6.2, did not change duodenal pH but tended to reduce fecal pH. Increased ruminal pH tended to increase digestion of fiber (9 percent) but reduced ruminal digestion of starch by 18 percent (P> .05). Ruminal pH and ruminal starch digestion were negatively correlated (P...

Journal: :Journal of animal science 2002
J J Sindt J S Drouillard H Thippareddi R K Phebus D L Lambert S P Montgomery T B Farran H J LaBrune J J Higgins R T Ethington

Crossbred beef steers (n = 615) were used in a 152-d experiment to compare steam-flaked corn (SFC) diets containing 0, 30, or 60% wet corn gluten feed (WCGF). On d 114 to 118, ruminal and fecal samples were collected from 180 steers and analyzed for pH, VFA, and total and acid-resistant Escherichia coli and coliforms. Acid resistance of E. coli and coliform populations was determined by exposur...

Journal: :Journal of animal science 2002
J S Van Kessel P C Nedoluha A Williams-Campbell R L Baldwin K R McLeod

Forty crossbred steers were used to determine the effects of carbohydrate supply site on the indigenous bacteria of the gastrointestinal tract. Steers were fitted with ruminal and abomasal infusion catheters and assigned randomly to one of eight groups in a complete randomized block design. The experimental period was 36 d. Treatments included: 1) a pelleted basal diet fed at 0.163 Mcal ME x (k...

Journal: :Journal of animal science 1991
S P Hart H A Glimp

Lambs (29 +/- 2.5 kg) were fed three diets at various intakes to determine whether diet composition or level of intake was reflected in changes in diet digestibility or ruminal fluid characteristics. In Exp. 1, a 90% concentrated, pelleted diet or a whole shelled corn diet with a pelleted protein supplement was fed at three levels of intake: ad libitum and 92.5 and 85% of ad libitum (n = 15). E...

Journal: :Journal of animal science 2010
T R Callaway S E Dowd T S Edrington R C Anderson N Krueger N Bauer P J Kononoff D J Nisbet

Dietary components and changes cause shifts in the gastrointestinal microbial ecology that can play a role in animal health and productivity. However, most information about the microbial populations in the gut of livestock species has not been quantitative. In the present study, we utilized a new molecular method, bacterial tag-encoded FLX amplicon pyrosequencing (bTEFAP) that can perform dive...

Journal: :Journal of animal science 2000
A N Hristov T A McAllister K J Cheng

The effects of supplying increasing ruminal doses of exogenous polysaccharide-degrading enzymes (EPDE) on rumen fermentation and nutrient digestion were studied using eight ruminally cannulated heifers, four of which were also duodenally cannulated, in a replicated Latin square. The heifers were fed a diet of 85.5% rolled barley grain and 14% barley silage (DM basis), and once daily they were g...

2016
Shigeru Sato

Evaluation of the radio-transmission pH-measurement system for monitoring the ruminal pH and subacute ruminal acidosis (SARA) in cattle is described. This is done in order to reveal the possible application of this system for detection and pathophysiological research of SARA by continuous ruminal pH measurement. The possibility of using this system for assessment of the ruminal pH in SARA cattl...

Journal: :Journal of animal science 2006
J J Reed A L Gelvin G P Lardy M L Bauer J S Caton

Nine ruminally and duodenally cannulated (172 +/- 23 kg of initial BW; Exp. 1) and 16 intact (153 +/- 28 kg of initial BW; Exp. 2) crossbred nursing steer calves were used to evaluate the effects of creep feed supplementation and advancing season on intake, digestion, microbial efficiency, ruminal fermentation, and performance while grazing native rangeland. Treatments in both experiments were ...

Journal: :Anaerobe 2007
Hector Gutierrez-Bañuelos Robin C Anderson Gordon E Carstens Lisa J Slay Nicole Ramlachan Shane M Horrocks Todd R Callaway Thomas S Edrington David J Nisbet

Nitroethane inhibits the growth of certain zoonotic pathogens such as Campylobacter and Salmonella spp., foodborne pathogens estimated to cause millions of human infections each year, and enhances the Salmonella- and Escherichia coli-killing effect of an experimental chlorate product being developed as a feed additive to kill these bacteria immediately pre-harvest. Limited studies have shown th...

2007
SCOTT S. SWANEK Clinton R. Krehbiel Gerald W. Horn Hebbie T. Purvis Carla L. Goad Carla Goad Carolyn Lunsford Donna Perry Joan Summers Tim Bodine

Five ruminally cannulated steers (initial BW = 375 ± 34 kg; ADG = 1.16 ± 0.13 kg) were used in a 5 x 5 Latin square design experiment to determine the effects of increasing urea level on intake, nutrient digestion, nitrogen balance and ruminal kinetics. Isocaloric (NEm = 2.11 Mcal/kg; NEg = 1.35 Mcal/kg) and isonitrogenous (2.24% N) steam-flaked corn-based diets with urea concentrations of 0.0,...

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