Classification of Erythrina provenances by rumen degradation characteristics of dry matter and nitrogen

Some species of the genus Erythrina have considerable potential as forage, but information on their nutritional value is scanty. The objective of the study was to define groups of Erythrina provenances based on rumen degradation parameters for dry matter and nitrogen which would be useful in the sel...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Larbi, Asamoah, Kurdi, I.O., Said, A.N., Hanson, Jean
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Springer 1996
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/28149
_version_ 1855517764263870464
author Larbi, Asamoah
Kurdi, I.O.
Said, A.N.
Hanson, Jean
author_browse Hanson, Jean
Kurdi, I.O.
Larbi, Asamoah
Said, A.N.
author_facet Larbi, Asamoah
Kurdi, I.O.
Said, A.N.
Hanson, Jean
author_sort Larbi, Asamoah
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Some species of the genus Erythrina have considerable potential as forage, but information on their nutritional value is scanty. The objective of the study was to define groups of Erythrina provenances based on rumen degradation parameters for dry matter and nitrogen which would be useful in the selection of provenances for detailed nutritional or tree improvement studies. Degradation parameters (i.e. soluble fraction (a), slowly degradable fraction (b) rate of degradation (c) and extent of degradation (a+b) were estimated for twenty Erythrina provenances beloging to seven species (E. abyssinica, E. bentipoeme, E. brucei, E. burana, E. melanacantha, E. poeppigiana and E. variegata)). The data were subjected to principal component and cluster analyses for grouping, and the 20 provenances were placed into four distinct cluster groups. Provenances of E. brucei and E. abyssinica belonged to three clusters, whereas provenances of E. burana and E. variegata were confined to one cluster. Using extent of dry matter and nitrogen degradation values of 71 and 86 percent respectively, as a forage quality index, members of clusters 1 and 2 (i.e. E. abyssinica, ILCA 10606; E. brucei, ILCA 10579, 10625, 10628, 10637, 10643; E. burana 10575, 10641, 12157; E. melanacantha ILCA 10574 and E. variegata ILCA 14991 and 14994), appeared to be superior in quality to their counterparts in clusters 3 and 4. The results suggested existence of intra and inter-species variation in rumen degradation characteristics for dry matter and nitrogen within the genus Erythrina.
format Journal Article
id CGSpace28149
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 1996
publishDateRange 1996
publishDateSort 1996
publisher Springer
publisherStr Springer
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace281492024-04-25T06:00:29Z Classification of Erythrina provenances by rumen degradation characteristics of dry matter and nitrogen Larbi, Asamoah Kurdi, I.O. Said, A.N. Hanson, Jean erythrina provenance feed quality rumen degradation nutritive value chemical analysis forestry Some species of the genus Erythrina have considerable potential as forage, but information on their nutritional value is scanty. The objective of the study was to define groups of Erythrina provenances based on rumen degradation parameters for dry matter and nitrogen which would be useful in the selection of provenances for detailed nutritional or tree improvement studies. Degradation parameters (i.e. soluble fraction (a), slowly degradable fraction (b) rate of degradation (c) and extent of degradation (a+b) were estimated for twenty Erythrina provenances beloging to seven species (E. abyssinica, E. bentipoeme, E. brucei, E. burana, E. melanacantha, E. poeppigiana and E. variegata)). The data were subjected to principal component and cluster analyses for grouping, and the 20 provenances were placed into four distinct cluster groups. Provenances of E. brucei and E. abyssinica belonged to three clusters, whereas provenances of E. burana and E. variegata were confined to one cluster. Using extent of dry matter and nitrogen degradation values of 71 and 86 percent respectively, as a forage quality index, members of clusters 1 and 2 (i.e. E. abyssinica, ILCA 10606; E. brucei, ILCA 10579, 10625, 10628, 10637, 10643; E. burana 10575, 10641, 12157; E. melanacantha ILCA 10574 and E. variegata ILCA 14991 and 14994), appeared to be superior in quality to their counterparts in clusters 3 and 4. The results suggested existence of intra and inter-species variation in rumen degradation characteristics for dry matter and nitrogen within the genus Erythrina. 1996-02 2013-05-06T07:00:00Z 2013-05-06T07:00:00Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/28149 en Limited Access Springer Agroforestry Systems;33(2): 153-163
spellingShingle erythrina
provenance
feed quality
rumen
degradation
nutritive value
chemical analysis
forestry
Larbi, Asamoah
Kurdi, I.O.
Said, A.N.
Hanson, Jean
Classification of Erythrina provenances by rumen degradation characteristics of dry matter and nitrogen
title Classification of Erythrina provenances by rumen degradation characteristics of dry matter and nitrogen
title_full Classification of Erythrina provenances by rumen degradation characteristics of dry matter and nitrogen
title_fullStr Classification of Erythrina provenances by rumen degradation characteristics of dry matter and nitrogen
title_full_unstemmed Classification of Erythrina provenances by rumen degradation characteristics of dry matter and nitrogen
title_short Classification of Erythrina provenances by rumen degradation characteristics of dry matter and nitrogen
title_sort classification of erythrina provenances by rumen degradation characteristics of dry matter and nitrogen
topic erythrina
provenance
feed quality
rumen
degradation
nutritive value
chemical analysis
forestry
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/28149
work_keys_str_mv AT larbiasamoah classificationoferythrinaprovenancesbyrumendegradationcharacteristicsofdrymatterandnitrogen
AT kurdiio classificationoferythrinaprovenancesbyrumendegradationcharacteristicsofdrymatterandnitrogen
AT saidan classificationoferythrinaprovenancesbyrumendegradationcharacteristicsofdrymatterandnitrogen
AT hansonjean classificationoferythrinaprovenancesbyrumendegradationcharacteristicsofdrymatterandnitrogen