Cargando…

Grape Pomace Ingestion by Dry Cows Does Not Affect the Colostrum Nutrient and Fatty Acid Composition

SIMPLE SUMMARY: The introduction of alternative feedstuff such as grape pomace into the diets of dry cows could decrease the cereal needs in ruminant feeding systems and could modify the composition of colostrum. Grape pomace is a by-product of the wine industry. It contains polyphenols and fatty ac...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Rolinec, Michal, Bíro, Daniel, Šimko, Milan, Juráček, Miroslav, Hanušovský, Ondrej, Schubertová, Zuzana, Chadimová, Lucie, Gálik, Branislav
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8227017/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34073000
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani11061633
_version_ 1783712425315401728
author Rolinec, Michal
Bíro, Daniel
Šimko, Milan
Juráček, Miroslav
Hanušovský, Ondrej
Schubertová, Zuzana
Chadimová, Lucie
Gálik, Branislav
author_facet Rolinec, Michal
Bíro, Daniel
Šimko, Milan
Juráček, Miroslav
Hanušovský, Ondrej
Schubertová, Zuzana
Chadimová, Lucie
Gálik, Branislav
author_sort Rolinec, Michal
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: The introduction of alternative feedstuff such as grape pomace into the diets of dry cows could decrease the cereal needs in ruminant feeding systems and could modify the composition of colostrum. Grape pomace is a by-product of the wine industry. It contains polyphenols and fatty acids, which have the potential to improve the animal product quality. The nutritional quality of colostrum and the quality of colostral fat is affected by dry cow nutrition in the late stages of pregnancy. This study determined the potential of grape pomace feeding to increase colostral protein, which, according to the literature, is connected with the concentration of immunoglobulin G, better passive immunisation, and the health of calves. The addition of grape pomace was determined to have no effect on colostral nutrient and fatty acid concentrations. Thus, grape pomace can be used as a nutrient source for dry cows. ABSTRACT: The utilisation of different by-products from the food industry as nutrient sources for farm animals is both possible and beneficial. Grape pomace is a by-product that contains polyphenols and fatty acids, both of which have the potential to improve the nutritional quality of cow colostrum. This study aimed to explore how the addition of grape pomace to the diet of dry cows affects the concentration of nutrients and fatty acids of colostrum. Sixteen Slovak spotted cows in late pregnancy were used in this study. From the seventh day before expected calving to the day of calving, cows in the grape pomace group received a diet supplemented with dried grape pomace, at 0.116 kg/cow/day. Colostrum samples were analysed for basal nutrients and fatty acid concentrations. Between the control and experimental groups, the nutrient and fatty acid concentrations of all the colostrum samples did not show significant differences. The nutrient levels in the colostrum from both groups of cows were typical, as related to the time from calving. The addition of the grape pomace into the diet of dry cows had no effect on nutrient concentrations and the fatty acid composition of the colostrum. The somatic cell score of the colostrum sampled at the 12th hour after calving (4.2 versus 2.6) was positively affected by grape pomace addition. The results of this study revealed that grape pomace (fed in an amount of 0.116 kg/cow/day) had no positive or negative effect on the base nutrients and fatty acids of cow colostrum, and, therefore, grape pomace can be used as a nutrient source for dry cows in small amounts.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8227017
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2021
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-82270172021-06-26 Grape Pomace Ingestion by Dry Cows Does Not Affect the Colostrum Nutrient and Fatty Acid Composition Rolinec, Michal Bíro, Daniel Šimko, Milan Juráček, Miroslav Hanušovský, Ondrej Schubertová, Zuzana Chadimová, Lucie Gálik, Branislav Animals (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: The introduction of alternative feedstuff such as grape pomace into the diets of dry cows could decrease the cereal needs in ruminant feeding systems and could modify the composition of colostrum. Grape pomace is a by-product of the wine industry. It contains polyphenols and fatty acids, which have the potential to improve the animal product quality. The nutritional quality of colostrum and the quality of colostral fat is affected by dry cow nutrition in the late stages of pregnancy. This study determined the potential of grape pomace feeding to increase colostral protein, which, according to the literature, is connected with the concentration of immunoglobulin G, better passive immunisation, and the health of calves. The addition of grape pomace was determined to have no effect on colostral nutrient and fatty acid concentrations. Thus, grape pomace can be used as a nutrient source for dry cows. ABSTRACT: The utilisation of different by-products from the food industry as nutrient sources for farm animals is both possible and beneficial. Grape pomace is a by-product that contains polyphenols and fatty acids, both of which have the potential to improve the nutritional quality of cow colostrum. This study aimed to explore how the addition of grape pomace to the diet of dry cows affects the concentration of nutrients and fatty acids of colostrum. Sixteen Slovak spotted cows in late pregnancy were used in this study. From the seventh day before expected calving to the day of calving, cows in the grape pomace group received a diet supplemented with dried grape pomace, at 0.116 kg/cow/day. Colostrum samples were analysed for basal nutrients and fatty acid concentrations. Between the control and experimental groups, the nutrient and fatty acid concentrations of all the colostrum samples did not show significant differences. The nutrient levels in the colostrum from both groups of cows were typical, as related to the time from calving. The addition of the grape pomace into the diet of dry cows had no effect on nutrient concentrations and the fatty acid composition of the colostrum. The somatic cell score of the colostrum sampled at the 12th hour after calving (4.2 versus 2.6) was positively affected by grape pomace addition. The results of this study revealed that grape pomace (fed in an amount of 0.116 kg/cow/day) had no positive or negative effect on the base nutrients and fatty acids of cow colostrum, and, therefore, grape pomace can be used as a nutrient source for dry cows in small amounts. MDPI 2021-05-31 /pmc/articles/PMC8227017/ /pubmed/34073000 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani11061633 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Rolinec, Michal
Bíro, Daniel
Šimko, Milan
Juráček, Miroslav
Hanušovský, Ondrej
Schubertová, Zuzana
Chadimová, Lucie
Gálik, Branislav
Grape Pomace Ingestion by Dry Cows Does Not Affect the Colostrum Nutrient and Fatty Acid Composition
title Grape Pomace Ingestion by Dry Cows Does Not Affect the Colostrum Nutrient and Fatty Acid Composition
title_full Grape Pomace Ingestion by Dry Cows Does Not Affect the Colostrum Nutrient and Fatty Acid Composition
title_fullStr Grape Pomace Ingestion by Dry Cows Does Not Affect the Colostrum Nutrient and Fatty Acid Composition
title_full_unstemmed Grape Pomace Ingestion by Dry Cows Does Not Affect the Colostrum Nutrient and Fatty Acid Composition
title_short Grape Pomace Ingestion by Dry Cows Does Not Affect the Colostrum Nutrient and Fatty Acid Composition
title_sort grape pomace ingestion by dry cows does not affect the colostrum nutrient and fatty acid composition
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8227017/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34073000
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani11061633
work_keys_str_mv AT rolinecmichal grapepomaceingestionbydrycowsdoesnotaffectthecolostrumnutrientandfattyacidcomposition
AT birodaniel grapepomaceingestionbydrycowsdoesnotaffectthecolostrumnutrientandfattyacidcomposition
AT simkomilan grapepomaceingestionbydrycowsdoesnotaffectthecolostrumnutrientandfattyacidcomposition
AT juracekmiroslav grapepomaceingestionbydrycowsdoesnotaffectthecolostrumnutrientandfattyacidcomposition
AT hanusovskyondrej grapepomaceingestionbydrycowsdoesnotaffectthecolostrumnutrientandfattyacidcomposition
AT schubertovazuzana grapepomaceingestionbydrycowsdoesnotaffectthecolostrumnutrientandfattyacidcomposition
AT chadimovalucie grapepomaceingestionbydrycowsdoesnotaffectthecolostrumnutrientandfattyacidcomposition
AT galikbranislav grapepomaceingestionbydrycowsdoesnotaffectthecolostrumnutrientandfattyacidcomposition