Nitrogen in browse species: Ruminal degradability and post-ruminal digestibility measured by mobile nylon bag and in vitro techniques

This study determined nitrogen degradability and digestibility of rumen undegradable nitrogen using mobile nylon bag (MNB) and pepsin/pancreatin in vitro technique (IV) of 40 browse species. Thirty Ethiopian highland sheep fitted with rumen cannulae were used in nitrogen (N) degradability studies. S...

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Autores principales: Kaitho, R.J., Umunna, N.N., Nsahlai, I.V., Tamminga, S., Bruchem, J. van
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Wiley 1998
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/33021
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author Kaitho, R.J.
Umunna, N.N.
Nsahlai, I.V.
Tamminga, S.
Bruchem, J. van
author_browse Bruchem, J. van
Kaitho, R.J.
Nsahlai, I.V.
Tamminga, S.
Umunna, N.N.
author_facet Kaitho, R.J.
Umunna, N.N.
Nsahlai, I.V.
Tamminga, S.
Bruchem, J. van
author_sort Kaitho, R.J.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description This study determined nitrogen degradability and digestibility of rumen undegradable nitrogen using mobile nylon bag (MNB) and pepsin/pancreatin in vitro technique (IV) of 40 browse species. Thirty Ethiopian highland sheep fitted with rumen cannulae were used in nitrogen (N) degradability studies. Six steers fitted with rumen cannulae were used in preparation of 16-h and 24-h ruminal undegraded residues and four steers fitted with distal abomasal cannulae were used in MNB technique. The browses varied widely in nitrogen solubility (15-468 g kg-1), potential degradability (223-976 g kg-1), rate of degradation (0.13-24 percent h-1) and effective degradability (135-821 kg-1). The apparent N digestibility (ND) of the rumen undegraded residues differed significantly (P<0.05) among browse species. No significant difference (P>0.05) was observed in ND of 16-h and 24-h residues. The ND of the 16-h residue varied from -218 to 759 g kg-1 and 169 to 851 g kg-1 for MNB and IV methods, respectively. Browse species with high tannin contents such as Acacia hockii, A horrida, A melanoxylon, A persiciflora, A salicina, A saligna and Flemingia macrophylla had high rumen by-pass and a low ND, while Sesbania spp and A nilotica with low tannin contents underwent rapid and extensive dry matter and nitrogen degradation in the rumen. Acacia sieberiana, Chamaecytisus palmensis, Erythrina spp, Gliricidia sepium, Samanea saman and Enterolobium cyclocarpum had high proportions of protein escaping rumen degradation (BP) and with a high proportion of the by-pass protein digested in the intestine, therefore these browses had a high potential as protein supplements. The ND measured with the MNB were significantly lower (P<0.001) than by the IV method. The correlation between MNB and IV was high and significant (R2=0.89, P<0.0001) as also indicated by the regression equation (SE in parentheses): MNB = -22.8 (4.55) + 1.0 (0.08)IV (RSD = 10.56, R2=0.79, n=40, P<0.001). The intercept of the linear relationship obtained was different from zero while the slope was not different from unity. Multiple regression analysis suggested that some of the unexplained variation could be accounted for by either nitrogen, acid detergent fibre, total phenolics or neutral detergent fibre bound tannin levels in browses. The IV method is accurate for estimating digestibility of ruminally undegradable N, and hence its use would considerably reduce the need for delicate surgery and the elaborate procedures involving the MNB technique.
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spelling CGSpace330212024-04-25T06:00:18Z Nitrogen in browse species: Ruminal degradability and post-ruminal digestibility measured by mobile nylon bag and in vitro techniques Kaitho, R.J. Umunna, N.N. Nsahlai, I.V. Tamminga, S. Bruchem, J. van browse plants nitrogen degradation digestibility rumen chemical composition This study determined nitrogen degradability and digestibility of rumen undegradable nitrogen using mobile nylon bag (MNB) and pepsin/pancreatin in vitro technique (IV) of 40 browse species. Thirty Ethiopian highland sheep fitted with rumen cannulae were used in nitrogen (N) degradability studies. Six steers fitted with rumen cannulae were used in preparation of 16-h and 24-h ruminal undegraded residues and four steers fitted with distal abomasal cannulae were used in MNB technique. The browses varied widely in nitrogen solubility (15-468 g kg-1), potential degradability (223-976 g kg-1), rate of degradation (0.13-24 percent h-1) and effective degradability (135-821 kg-1). The apparent N digestibility (ND) of the rumen undegraded residues differed significantly (P<0.05) among browse species. No significant difference (P>0.05) was observed in ND of 16-h and 24-h residues. The ND of the 16-h residue varied from -218 to 759 g kg-1 and 169 to 851 g kg-1 for MNB and IV methods, respectively. Browse species with high tannin contents such as Acacia hockii, A horrida, A melanoxylon, A persiciflora, A salicina, A saligna and Flemingia macrophylla had high rumen by-pass and a low ND, while Sesbania spp and A nilotica with low tannin contents underwent rapid and extensive dry matter and nitrogen degradation in the rumen. Acacia sieberiana, Chamaecytisus palmensis, Erythrina spp, Gliricidia sepium, Samanea saman and Enterolobium cyclocarpum had high proportions of protein escaping rumen degradation (BP) and with a high proportion of the by-pass protein digested in the intestine, therefore these browses had a high potential as protein supplements. The ND measured with the MNB were significantly lower (P<0.001) than by the IV method. The correlation between MNB and IV was high and significant (R2=0.89, P<0.0001) as also indicated by the regression equation (SE in parentheses): MNB = -22.8 (4.55) + 1.0 (0.08)IV (RSD = 10.56, R2=0.79, n=40, P<0.001). The intercept of the linear relationship obtained was different from zero while the slope was not different from unity. Multiple regression analysis suggested that some of the unexplained variation could be accounted for by either nitrogen, acid detergent fibre, total phenolics or neutral detergent fibre bound tannin levels in browses. The IV method is accurate for estimating digestibility of ruminally undegradable N, and hence its use would considerably reduce the need for delicate surgery and the elaborate procedures involving the MNB technique. 1998-04 2013-07-03T05:25:56Z 2013-07-03T05:25:56Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/33021 en Limited Access Wiley Kaitho, R. J., Umunna, N. N., Nsahlai, I. V., Tamminga, S., & van Bruchem, J. (1998). Nitrogen in browse species: ruminal degradability and post-ruminal digestibility measured by mobile nylon bag andin vitro techniques. In Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture (Vol. 76, Issue 4, pp. 488–498). Wiley. https://doi.org/10.1002/(sici)1097-0010(199804)76:4<488
spellingShingle browse plants
nitrogen
degradation
digestibility
rumen
chemical composition
Kaitho, R.J.
Umunna, N.N.
Nsahlai, I.V.
Tamminga, S.
Bruchem, J. van
Nitrogen in browse species: Ruminal degradability and post-ruminal digestibility measured by mobile nylon bag and in vitro techniques
title Nitrogen in browse species: Ruminal degradability and post-ruminal digestibility measured by mobile nylon bag and in vitro techniques
title_full Nitrogen in browse species: Ruminal degradability and post-ruminal digestibility measured by mobile nylon bag and in vitro techniques
title_fullStr Nitrogen in browse species: Ruminal degradability and post-ruminal digestibility measured by mobile nylon bag and in vitro techniques
title_full_unstemmed Nitrogen in browse species: Ruminal degradability and post-ruminal digestibility measured by mobile nylon bag and in vitro techniques
title_short Nitrogen in browse species: Ruminal degradability and post-ruminal digestibility measured by mobile nylon bag and in vitro techniques
title_sort nitrogen in browse species ruminal degradability and post ruminal digestibility measured by mobile nylon bag and in vitro techniques
topic browse plants
nitrogen
degradation
digestibility
rumen
chemical composition
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/33021
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