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Pelleted-hay alfalfa feed increases sheep wether weight gain and rumen bacterial richness over loose-hay alfalfa feed

Diet composed of smaller particles can improve feed intake, digestibility, and animal growth or health, but in ruminant species can reduce rumination and buffering–the loss of which may inhibit fermentation and digestibility. However, the explicit effect of particle size on the rumen microbiota rema...

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Autores principales: Ishaq, Suzanne L., Lachman, Medora M., Wenner, Benjamin A., Baeza, Amy, Butler, Molly, Gates, Emily, Olivo, Sarah, Geddes, Julie Buono, Hatfield, Patrick, Yeoman, Carl J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6550389/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31166949
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0215797
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author Ishaq, Suzanne L.
Lachman, Medora M.
Wenner, Benjamin A.
Baeza, Amy
Butler, Molly
Gates, Emily
Olivo, Sarah
Geddes, Julie Buono
Hatfield, Patrick
Yeoman, Carl J.
author_facet Ishaq, Suzanne L.
Lachman, Medora M.
Wenner, Benjamin A.
Baeza, Amy
Butler, Molly
Gates, Emily
Olivo, Sarah
Geddes, Julie Buono
Hatfield, Patrick
Yeoman, Carl J.
author_sort Ishaq, Suzanne L.
collection PubMed
description Diet composed of smaller particles can improve feed intake, digestibility, and animal growth or health, but in ruminant species can reduce rumination and buffering–the loss of which may inhibit fermentation and digestibility. However, the explicit effect of particle size on the rumen microbiota remains untested, despite their crucial role in digestion. We evaluated the effects of reduced particle size on rumen microbiota by feeding long-stem (loose) alfalfa hay compared to a ground and pelleted version of the same alfalfa in yearling sheep wethers during a two-week experimental period. In situ digestibility of the pelleted diet was greater at 48 h compared with loose hay; however, distribution of residual fecal particle sizes in sheep did not differ between the dietary treatments at any time point (day 7 or 14). Both average daily gain and feed efficiency were greater for the wethers consuming the pelleted diet. Observed bacterial richness was very low at the end of the adaptation period and increased over the course of the study, suggesting the rumen bacterial community was still in flux after two weeks of adaptation. The pelleted-hay diet group had a greater increase in bacterial richness, including common fibrolytic rumen inhabitants. The pelleted diet was positively associated with several Succiniclasticum, a Prevotella, and uncultured taxa in the Ruminococcaceae and Rickenellaceae families and Bacteroidales order. Pelleting an alfalfa hay diet for sheep does shift the rumen microbiome, though the interplay of diet particle size, retention and gastrointestinal transit time, microbial fermentative and hydrolytic activity, and host growth or health is still largely unexplored.
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spelling pubmed-65503892019-06-17 Pelleted-hay alfalfa feed increases sheep wether weight gain and rumen bacterial richness over loose-hay alfalfa feed Ishaq, Suzanne L. Lachman, Medora M. Wenner, Benjamin A. Baeza, Amy Butler, Molly Gates, Emily Olivo, Sarah Geddes, Julie Buono Hatfield, Patrick Yeoman, Carl J. PLoS One Research Article Diet composed of smaller particles can improve feed intake, digestibility, and animal growth or health, but in ruminant species can reduce rumination and buffering–the loss of which may inhibit fermentation and digestibility. However, the explicit effect of particle size on the rumen microbiota remains untested, despite their crucial role in digestion. We evaluated the effects of reduced particle size on rumen microbiota by feeding long-stem (loose) alfalfa hay compared to a ground and pelleted version of the same alfalfa in yearling sheep wethers during a two-week experimental period. In situ digestibility of the pelleted diet was greater at 48 h compared with loose hay; however, distribution of residual fecal particle sizes in sheep did not differ between the dietary treatments at any time point (day 7 or 14). Both average daily gain and feed efficiency were greater for the wethers consuming the pelleted diet. Observed bacterial richness was very low at the end of the adaptation period and increased over the course of the study, suggesting the rumen bacterial community was still in flux after two weeks of adaptation. The pelleted-hay diet group had a greater increase in bacterial richness, including common fibrolytic rumen inhabitants. The pelleted diet was positively associated with several Succiniclasticum, a Prevotella, and uncultured taxa in the Ruminococcaceae and Rickenellaceae families and Bacteroidales order. Pelleting an alfalfa hay diet for sheep does shift the rumen microbiome, though the interplay of diet particle size, retention and gastrointestinal transit time, microbial fermentative and hydrolytic activity, and host growth or health is still largely unexplored. Public Library of Science 2019-06-05 /pmc/articles/PMC6550389/ /pubmed/31166949 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0215797 Text en © 2019 Ishaq 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 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Ishaq, Suzanne L.
Lachman, Medora M.
Wenner, Benjamin A.
Baeza, Amy
Butler, Molly
Gates, Emily
Olivo, Sarah
Geddes, Julie Buono
Hatfield, Patrick
Yeoman, Carl J.
Pelleted-hay alfalfa feed increases sheep wether weight gain and rumen bacterial richness over loose-hay alfalfa feed
title Pelleted-hay alfalfa feed increases sheep wether weight gain and rumen bacterial richness over loose-hay alfalfa feed
title_full Pelleted-hay alfalfa feed increases sheep wether weight gain and rumen bacterial richness over loose-hay alfalfa feed
title_fullStr Pelleted-hay alfalfa feed increases sheep wether weight gain and rumen bacterial richness over loose-hay alfalfa feed
title_full_unstemmed Pelleted-hay alfalfa feed increases sheep wether weight gain and rumen bacterial richness over loose-hay alfalfa feed
title_short Pelleted-hay alfalfa feed increases sheep wether weight gain and rumen bacterial richness over loose-hay alfalfa feed
title_sort pelleted-hay alfalfa feed increases sheep wether weight gain and rumen bacterial richness over loose-hay alfalfa feed
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6550389/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31166949
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0215797
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