Effects of peat and wood shavings as bedding on the faecal microflora of horses

The main purpose of this study was to determine the impact of bedding material on the faecal microflora of horses. Another objective was to investigate the hygienic and physical qualities of the bedding materials used and how these may change in the course of the trial period. The bedding materials...

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Autor principal: Hübinette, Louise
Formato: H2
Lenguaje:Inglés
sueco
Publicado: SLU/Dept. of Animal Nutrition and Management (until 231231) 2010
Materias:
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author Hübinette, Louise
author_browse Hübinette, Louise
author_facet Hübinette, Louise
author_sort Hübinette, Louise
collection Epsilon Archive for Student Projects
description The main purpose of this study was to determine the impact of bedding material on the faecal microflora of horses. Another objective was to investigate the hygienic and physical qualities of the bedding materials used and how these may change in the course of the trial period. The bedding materials used were sphagnum peat and wood shavings. Six horses had each material as bedding for a three week period in a change–over experiment. The horses’ ration of roughage was distributed directly on top of the bedding. Faecal samples were collected weekly for measuring of pH and for Terminal restriction length polymorphism (T-RFLP) analysis. T-RFLP analysis is a PCR based method were the size of 16S rRNA fragments are determined in order to study microbial communities. Samples of bedding material were collected at the start up an end of each period and sent for hygienic analysing. Samples of the haylage fed to the horses were collected weekly and sent for analysis as one sample per period. Samples were also taken from both materials in the beginning and end of each period for determination of pH, dry matter and water holding capacity. Registrations of indoor and outdoor temperature and humidity were done on a daily basis. Bedding material did not influence the faecal pH. The T-FRLP analysis did not show any impact from bedding material on the microflora. Peat had significantly higher water holding capacity compared to wood shavings. Penicillium spp. was the most common mould found in peat and wood shavings. There was no difference in number of aerobic bacteria, yeasts, moulds and thermophilic fungi between peat and wood shavings. The number of aerobic bacteria had increased significantly in both bedding materials in the end of the periods. In conclusion, bedding material does not influence the faecal microflora with the conditions given in this study.
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institution Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
language Inglés
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publishDate 2010
publishDateSort 2010
publisher SLU/Dept. of Animal Nutrition and Management (until 231231)
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spelling RepoSLU11922012-04-20T14:12:51Z Effects of peat and wood shavings as bedding on the faecal microflora of horses Hübinette, Louise horses faecal microflora faecal pH bedding material The main purpose of this study was to determine the impact of bedding material on the faecal microflora of horses. Another objective was to investigate the hygienic and physical qualities of the bedding materials used and how these may change in the course of the trial period. The bedding materials used were sphagnum peat and wood shavings. Six horses had each material as bedding for a three week period in a change–over experiment. The horses’ ration of roughage was distributed directly on top of the bedding. Faecal samples were collected weekly for measuring of pH and for Terminal restriction length polymorphism (T-RFLP) analysis. T-RFLP analysis is a PCR based method were the size of 16S rRNA fragments are determined in order to study microbial communities. Samples of bedding material were collected at the start up an end of each period and sent for hygienic analysing. Samples of the haylage fed to the horses were collected weekly and sent for analysis as one sample per period. Samples were also taken from both materials in the beginning and end of each period for determination of pH, dry matter and water holding capacity. Registrations of indoor and outdoor temperature and humidity were done on a daily basis. Bedding material did not influence the faecal pH. The T-FRLP analysis did not show any impact from bedding material on the microflora. Peat had significantly higher water holding capacity compared to wood shavings. Penicillium spp. was the most common mould found in peat and wood shavings. There was no difference in number of aerobic bacteria, yeasts, moulds and thermophilic fungi between peat and wood shavings. The number of aerobic bacteria had increased significantly in both bedding materials in the end of the periods. In conclusion, bedding material does not influence the faecal microflora with the conditions given in this study. SLU/Dept. of Animal Nutrition and Management (until 231231) 2010 H2 eng swe https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/1192/
spellingShingle horses
faecal microflora
faecal pH
bedding material
Hübinette, Louise
Effects of peat and wood shavings as bedding on the faecal microflora of horses
title Effects of peat and wood shavings as bedding on the faecal microflora of horses
title_full Effects of peat and wood shavings as bedding on the faecal microflora of horses
title_fullStr Effects of peat and wood shavings as bedding on the faecal microflora of horses
title_full_unstemmed Effects of peat and wood shavings as bedding on the faecal microflora of horses
title_short Effects of peat and wood shavings as bedding on the faecal microflora of horses
title_sort effects of peat and wood shavings as bedding on the faecal microflora of horses
topic horses
faecal microflora
faecal pH
bedding material