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The Effect of Five Different Wetting Treatments on the Nutrient Content and Microbial Concentration in Hay for Horses

Five different hays were used to determine the effect of 5 different soaking and steaming treatments on the water soluble carbohydrate and microbial (bacteria and mould) contents of UK hay. Hays were subjected to the following 5 treatments: 1. Dry; 2. Steamed for 50 minutes in the Haygain- 600 steam...

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Autores principales: Moore-Colyer, Meriel Jean Scott, Lumbis, Kimberly, Longland, Annette, Harris, Patricia
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4245254/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25426729
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0114079
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author Moore-Colyer, Meriel Jean Scott
Lumbis, Kimberly
Longland, Annette
Harris, Patricia
author_facet Moore-Colyer, Meriel Jean Scott
Lumbis, Kimberly
Longland, Annette
Harris, Patricia
author_sort Moore-Colyer, Meriel Jean Scott
collection PubMed
description Five different hays were used to determine the effect of 5 different soaking and steaming treatments on the water soluble carbohydrate and microbial (bacteria and mould) contents of UK hay. Hays were subjected to the following 5 treatments: 1. Dry; 2. Steamed for 50 minutes in the Haygain- 600 steamer; 3. Soaked in water at 16°C for 9 hours; 4. Steamed then soaked and 5. Soaked then steamed. Post treatment hays were tested for water soluble carbohydrates, bacteria and mould contents. Differences between means were determined using ANOVA and least significant difference with hay (5), bale (3) and treatment (5) as fixed factors, thus n = 75. Protein and ash proportions were unaltered in any of the treatments. Soaked, steamed then soaked and soaked then steamed treatments were all equally effective at reducing water soluble carbohydrates, with significantly (P<0.05) lower mean contents (79–83 g/kg DM) compared with 126 and 122 g/kg dry matter (DM) for dry and steamed respectively. Steamed and soaked then steamed had significantly (P<0.05) less bacteria (1.04×10(3) and 4.9×10(2) CFU/g DM) compared with soaked which increased CFU/g DM from 6.0×10(4) in dry hay up to 3.5×10(5). Mould contents CFU/g DM were significantly (P<0.05) reduced by steaming (2) and soaking then steaming (1.9) but no difference was seen between dry (1148), soaked (692) or steamed then soaked (501). Soaking for 9 hours followed by steaming for 50 minutes in the Haygain steamer was the most effective method for reducing water soluble carbohydrates and microbial contamination in hay. Soaking or steaming+soaking lowered water soluble carbohydrates but significantly reduced the hygienic quality of the hay which could potentially compromise the health of the horse.
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spelling pubmed-42452542014-12-05 The Effect of Five Different Wetting Treatments on the Nutrient Content and Microbial Concentration in Hay for Horses Moore-Colyer, Meriel Jean Scott Lumbis, Kimberly Longland, Annette Harris, Patricia PLoS One Research Article Five different hays were used to determine the effect of 5 different soaking and steaming treatments on the water soluble carbohydrate and microbial (bacteria and mould) contents of UK hay. Hays were subjected to the following 5 treatments: 1. Dry; 2. Steamed for 50 minutes in the Haygain- 600 steamer; 3. Soaked in water at 16°C for 9 hours; 4. Steamed then soaked and 5. Soaked then steamed. Post treatment hays were tested for water soluble carbohydrates, bacteria and mould contents. Differences between means were determined using ANOVA and least significant difference with hay (5), bale (3) and treatment (5) as fixed factors, thus n = 75. Protein and ash proportions were unaltered in any of the treatments. Soaked, steamed then soaked and soaked then steamed treatments were all equally effective at reducing water soluble carbohydrates, with significantly (P<0.05) lower mean contents (79–83 g/kg DM) compared with 126 and 122 g/kg dry matter (DM) for dry and steamed respectively. Steamed and soaked then steamed had significantly (P<0.05) less bacteria (1.04×10(3) and 4.9×10(2) CFU/g DM) compared with soaked which increased CFU/g DM from 6.0×10(4) in dry hay up to 3.5×10(5). Mould contents CFU/g DM were significantly (P<0.05) reduced by steaming (2) and soaking then steaming (1.9) but no difference was seen between dry (1148), soaked (692) or steamed then soaked (501). Soaking for 9 hours followed by steaming for 50 minutes in the Haygain steamer was the most effective method for reducing water soluble carbohydrates and microbial contamination in hay. Soaking or steaming+soaking lowered water soluble carbohydrates but significantly reduced the hygienic quality of the hay which could potentially compromise the health of the horse. Public Library of Science 2014-11-26 /pmc/articles/PMC4245254/ /pubmed/25426729 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0114079 Text en © 2014 Moore-Colyer et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Moore-Colyer, Meriel Jean Scott
Lumbis, Kimberly
Longland, Annette
Harris, Patricia
The Effect of Five Different Wetting Treatments on the Nutrient Content and Microbial Concentration in Hay for Horses
title The Effect of Five Different Wetting Treatments on the Nutrient Content and Microbial Concentration in Hay for Horses
title_full The Effect of Five Different Wetting Treatments on the Nutrient Content and Microbial Concentration in Hay for Horses
title_fullStr The Effect of Five Different Wetting Treatments on the Nutrient Content and Microbial Concentration in Hay for Horses
title_full_unstemmed The Effect of Five Different Wetting Treatments on the Nutrient Content and Microbial Concentration in Hay for Horses
title_short The Effect of Five Different Wetting Treatments on the Nutrient Content and Microbial Concentration in Hay for Horses
title_sort effect of five different wetting treatments on the nutrient content and microbial concentration in hay for horses
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4245254/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25426729
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0114079
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