In vitro gas techniques and efficiency of microbial substrate degradation
In vitro techniques used for evaluating ruminant feeds can be classified into those that estimate gravimetrically their digestibility or degradability by quantifying the insoluble residues that remain after their incubation in inoculum containing rumen fluid, and those that measure the appearance of...
| Main Authors: | , |
|---|---|
| Format: | Journal Article |
| Language: | Inglés |
| Published: |
2002
|
| Subjects: | |
| Online Access: | https://hdl.handle.net/10568/28254 |
Similar Items: In vitro gas techniques and efficiency of microbial substrate degradation
- Methodological considerations in using gas production techniques for estimating ruminal microbial efficiencies for silage-based diets
- The influence of diet of the donor animal on the initial bacterial concentration of ruminal fluid and in vitro gas production degradability parameters
- Disturbio digestivo en el bovino caracterizado por hipermotilidad del rumen
- Isolation and characterization of anaerobic cellulose-degrading bacteria from East African porcupine (Hysterix cristata)
- Prediction of forage intake using in vitro gas production methods: Comparison of multiphase fermentation kinetics measured in an automated gas test, and combined gas volume and substrate degradability measurements in a manual syringe system
- Comparison of 4 methods for determining in vitro ruminal digestibility of annual ryegrass