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Fire management effects on ruminal digestibility and in vitro methane emissions of subtropical rangeland plant species

Prescribed fire is a common management practice used to manipulate rangeland plant productivity and composition. Although the nutritive value of most herbaceous plant species is considered poor for grazing animals, native rangelands in Florida are an important source of forage for livestock, especia...

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Autores principales: Cardoso, Abmael S, Silveira, Maria L, Vendramini, Joao M B, Moriel, Philipe, Kohmann, Marta M, Silva, Hiran M S, Izquierdo, Vinicius, Lima, Lais O, Lage Filho, Nauara M, Silva, Joao V L, Sanchez, Joao M D
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10464713/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37649644
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/tas/txad080
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author Cardoso, Abmael S
Silveira, Maria L
Vendramini, Joao M B
Moriel, Philipe
Kohmann, Marta M
Silva, Hiran M S
Izquierdo, Vinicius
Lima, Lais O
Lage Filho, Nauara M
Silva, Joao V L
Sanchez, Joao M D
author_facet Cardoso, Abmael S
Silveira, Maria L
Vendramini, Joao M B
Moriel, Philipe
Kohmann, Marta M
Silva, Hiran M S
Izquierdo, Vinicius
Lima, Lais O
Lage Filho, Nauara M
Silva, Joao V L
Sanchez, Joao M D
author_sort Cardoso, Abmael S
collection PubMed
description Prescribed fire is a common management practice used to manipulate rangeland plant productivity and composition. Although the nutritive value of most herbaceous plant species is considered poor for grazing animals, native rangelands in Florida are an important source of forage for livestock, especially during the winter months, when the productivity of cultivated perennial warm-season pastures is limited. This study evaluated the effects of prescribed fire on methanogenic potential and nutritive value of selected native rangeland plant species. Treatments were a 3 × 2 factorial arrangement of plant species (creeping bluestem [Schizachyrium scoparium var. stoloniferum {Nash} Wipff], wiregrass [Aristida stricta {Michx.}], or saw palmetto [Serenoa repens {W. Bartram} Small]) and prescribed fire management [2 yr after burning (control) vs. 1 yr after burning (burned)] distributed in a randomized complete block design with four replicates. Samples were analyzed for crude protein (CP), neutral detergent undigestible fiber (NDF), in vitro methane production, and in situ ruminal disappearance. Prescribed fire generally increased forage CP and DM effective degradability relative to control; however, no effect was observed on saw palmetto. Wiregrass had the least CP concentration in both burned (8.5%) and control (2.3%). In burned treatments, creeping bluestem and palmetto had greater DM effective degradability (62% and 58%) than wiregrass (53%). Fire increased in vitro gas production by 60 (creeping bluestem) to 90% (wiregrass) relative to control treatments. No effect of fire on methane production was observed for any of the plant species evaluated in this study. Creeping bluestem had the greatest methane production (12.5 mg/g DM), followed by wiregrass (5.3 mg/g DM) and saw palmetto (1.4 mg/g DM). Methane:DM effective degradability decreased in the following order: creeping bluestem ≥ wiregrass > saw palmetto. Data indicated prescribed fire was an effective tool to increase creeping bluestem and wiregrass nutritive value but no effect was observed on saw palmetto. Cattle grazing grass-dominated rangelands will likely emit more gas and methane than shrub or tree-dominated ecosystems; however, the greater forage nutritive value and subsequent positive impacts on animal production are expected to offset a substantial fraction of enteric methane emissions.
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spelling pubmed-104647132023-08-30 Fire management effects on ruminal digestibility and in vitro methane emissions of subtropical rangeland plant species Cardoso, Abmael S Silveira, Maria L Vendramini, Joao M B Moriel, Philipe Kohmann, Marta M Silva, Hiran M S Izquierdo, Vinicius Lima, Lais O Lage Filho, Nauara M Silva, Joao V L Sanchez, Joao M D Transl Anim Sci Forage Based Livestock Systems Prescribed fire is a common management practice used to manipulate rangeland plant productivity and composition. Although the nutritive value of most herbaceous plant species is considered poor for grazing animals, native rangelands in Florida are an important source of forage for livestock, especially during the winter months, when the productivity of cultivated perennial warm-season pastures is limited. This study evaluated the effects of prescribed fire on methanogenic potential and nutritive value of selected native rangeland plant species. Treatments were a 3 × 2 factorial arrangement of plant species (creeping bluestem [Schizachyrium scoparium var. stoloniferum {Nash} Wipff], wiregrass [Aristida stricta {Michx.}], or saw palmetto [Serenoa repens {W. Bartram} Small]) and prescribed fire management [2 yr after burning (control) vs. 1 yr after burning (burned)] distributed in a randomized complete block design with four replicates. Samples were analyzed for crude protein (CP), neutral detergent undigestible fiber (NDF), in vitro methane production, and in situ ruminal disappearance. Prescribed fire generally increased forage CP and DM effective degradability relative to control; however, no effect was observed on saw palmetto. Wiregrass had the least CP concentration in both burned (8.5%) and control (2.3%). In burned treatments, creeping bluestem and palmetto had greater DM effective degradability (62% and 58%) than wiregrass (53%). Fire increased in vitro gas production by 60 (creeping bluestem) to 90% (wiregrass) relative to control treatments. No effect of fire on methane production was observed for any of the plant species evaluated in this study. Creeping bluestem had the greatest methane production (12.5 mg/g DM), followed by wiregrass (5.3 mg/g DM) and saw palmetto (1.4 mg/g DM). Methane:DM effective degradability decreased in the following order: creeping bluestem ≥ wiregrass > saw palmetto. Data indicated prescribed fire was an effective tool to increase creeping bluestem and wiregrass nutritive value but no effect was observed on saw palmetto. Cattle grazing grass-dominated rangelands will likely emit more gas and methane than shrub or tree-dominated ecosystems; however, the greater forage nutritive value and subsequent positive impacts on animal production are expected to offset a substantial fraction of enteric methane emissions. Oxford University Press 2023-07-18 /pmc/articles/PMC10464713/ /pubmed/37649644 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/tas/txad080 Text en © The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the American Society of Animal Science. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Forage Based Livestock Systems
Cardoso, Abmael S
Silveira, Maria L
Vendramini, Joao M B
Moriel, Philipe
Kohmann, Marta M
Silva, Hiran M S
Izquierdo, Vinicius
Lima, Lais O
Lage Filho, Nauara M
Silva, Joao V L
Sanchez, Joao M D
Fire management effects on ruminal digestibility and in vitro methane emissions of subtropical rangeland plant species
title Fire management effects on ruminal digestibility and in vitro methane emissions of subtropical rangeland plant species
title_full Fire management effects on ruminal digestibility and in vitro methane emissions of subtropical rangeland plant species
title_fullStr Fire management effects on ruminal digestibility and in vitro methane emissions of subtropical rangeland plant species
title_full_unstemmed Fire management effects on ruminal digestibility and in vitro methane emissions of subtropical rangeland plant species
title_short Fire management effects on ruminal digestibility and in vitro methane emissions of subtropical rangeland plant species
title_sort fire management effects on ruminal digestibility and in vitro methane emissions of subtropical rangeland plant species
topic Forage Based Livestock Systems
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10464713/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37649644
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/tas/txad080
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