In vitro digestion of mixtures of concentrate and hay using inocula from sheep and goats

Dry matter digestibility (DMD) of 5 roughages (barley hay, sudex hay, alfalfa hay, barley straw and acacia) and their combination (1:1) with a concentrate mixture (14 percent CP, dry matter basis) was determined by a two-stage in vitro technique. The in vivo DMD values had been determined previously using 3 wether Chios sheep (S) and 3 wether Damascus goats (G) fed at restricted levels. Inoculum from two sources (sheep and goats) was used to determine in vitro DMD values. The inocula were collected from 3 sheep and 3 goats fed an alfalfa hay diet for 3 weeks. The inocula from each species were bulked to minimize variability associated with inoculum from individual animals. There were no species differences in the DMD values determined in vitro (G, 62.8 vs S, 62.1 percent). In the in vivo studies goats tended to be less efficient than sheep on the alfalfa hay plus concentrate diet, but more efficient on barley straw and acacia plus concentrate diets. When inoculum from sheep was used the correlation coefficients between in vivo and in vitro DMD values were 0.90 and 0.94 for roughages and mixtures, respectively. The corresponding correlation coefficients for goats were 0.90 and 0.77. The present data suggest that the in vitro technique can be used to determine digestibility of roughages and roughage-concentrate mixtures and that inoculum from sheep gives more accurate results for mixtures

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Main Authors: 76459 Hatjipanayiotou, M., 43144 Antoniou, T., 87746 Louca, A., 6757 Dairy Goat Journal Publishing Co., Scottsdale, AZ (EUA), 33022 3. International Conference on Goat Production and Disease Tucson, AZ (EUA) 10-15 Ene 1982
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Language:eng
Published: Scottsdale, AZ (EUA) 1982
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spelling KOHA-OAI-BVE:117402020-02-03T20:30:35ZIn vitro digestion of mixtures of concentrate and hay using inocula from sheep and goatsProceedings 76459 Hatjipanayiotou, M. 43144 Antoniou, T. 87746 Louca, A. 6757 Dairy Goat Journal Publishing Co., Scottsdale, AZ (EUA) 33022 3. International Conference on Goat Production and Disease Tucson, AZ (EUA) 10-15 Ene 1982 textScottsdale, AZ (EUA)1982engDry matter digestibility (DMD) of 5 roughages (barley hay, sudex hay, alfalfa hay, barley straw and acacia) and their combination (1:1) with a concentrate mixture (14 percent CP, dry matter basis) was determined by a two-stage in vitro technique. The in vivo DMD values had been determined previously using 3 wether Chios sheep (S) and 3 wether Damascus goats (G) fed at restricted levels. Inoculum from two sources (sheep and goats) was used to determine in vitro DMD values. The inocula were collected from 3 sheep and 3 goats fed an alfalfa hay diet for 3 weeks. The inocula from each species were bulked to minimize variability associated with inoculum from individual animals. There were no species differences in the DMD values determined in vitro (G, 62.8 vs S, 62.1 percent). In the in vivo studies goats tended to be less efficient than sheep on the alfalfa hay plus concentrate diet, but more efficient on barley straw and acacia plus concentrate diets. When inoculum from sheep was used the correlation coefficients between in vivo and in vitro DMD values were 0.90 and 0.94 for roughages and mixtures, respectively. The corresponding correlation coefficients for goats were 0.90 and 0.77. The present data suggest that the in vitro technique can be used to determine digestibility of roughages and roughage-concentrate mixtures and that inoculum from sheep gives more accurate results for mixturesDry matter digestibility (DMD) of 5 roughages (barley hay, sudex hay, alfalfa hay, barley straw and acacia) and their combination (1:1) with a concentrate mixture (14 percent CP, dry matter basis) was determined by a two-stage in vitro technique. The in vivo DMD values had been determined previously using 3 wether Chios sheep (S) and 3 wether Damascus goats (G) fed at restricted levels. Inoculum from two sources (sheep and goats) was used to determine in vitro DMD values. The inocula were collected from 3 sheep and 3 goats fed an alfalfa hay diet for 3 weeks. The inocula from each species were bulked to minimize variability associated with inoculum from individual animals. There were no species differences in the DMD values determined in vitro (G, 62.8 vs S, 62.1 percent). In the in vivo studies goats tended to be less efficient than sheep on the alfalfa hay plus concentrate diet, but more efficient on barley straw and acacia plus concentrate diets. When inoculum from sheep was used the correlation coefficients between in vivo and in vitro DMD values were 0.90 and 0.94 for roughages and mixtures, respectively. The corresponding correlation coefficients for goats were 0.90 and 0.77. The present data suggest that the in vitro technique can be used to determine digestibility of roughages and roughage-concentrate mixtures and that inoculum from sheep gives more accurate results for mixturesURN:ISBN:0-930848-17-9
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description Dry matter digestibility (DMD) of 5 roughages (barley hay, sudex hay, alfalfa hay, barley straw and acacia) and their combination (1:1) with a concentrate mixture (14 percent CP, dry matter basis) was determined by a two-stage in vitro technique. The in vivo DMD values had been determined previously using 3 wether Chios sheep (S) and 3 wether Damascus goats (G) fed at restricted levels. Inoculum from two sources (sheep and goats) was used to determine in vitro DMD values. The inocula were collected from 3 sheep and 3 goats fed an alfalfa hay diet for 3 weeks. The inocula from each species were bulked to minimize variability associated with inoculum from individual animals. There were no species differences in the DMD values determined in vitro (G, 62.8 vs S, 62.1 percent). In the in vivo studies goats tended to be less efficient than sheep on the alfalfa hay plus concentrate diet, but more efficient on barley straw and acacia plus concentrate diets. When inoculum from sheep was used the correlation coefficients between in vivo and in vitro DMD values were 0.90 and 0.94 for roughages and mixtures, respectively. The corresponding correlation coefficients for goats were 0.90 and 0.77. The present data suggest that the in vitro technique can be used to determine digestibility of roughages and roughage-concentrate mixtures and that inoculum from sheep gives more accurate results for mixtures
format Texto
author 76459 Hatjipanayiotou, M.
43144 Antoniou, T.
87746 Louca, A.
6757 Dairy Goat Journal Publishing Co., Scottsdale, AZ (EUA)
33022 3. International Conference on Goat Production and Disease Tucson, AZ (EUA) 10-15 Ene 1982
spellingShingle 76459 Hatjipanayiotou, M.
43144 Antoniou, T.
87746 Louca, A.
6757 Dairy Goat Journal Publishing Co., Scottsdale, AZ (EUA)
33022 3. International Conference on Goat Production and Disease Tucson, AZ (EUA) 10-15 Ene 1982
In vitro digestion of mixtures of concentrate and hay using inocula from sheep and goats
author_facet 76459 Hatjipanayiotou, M.
43144 Antoniou, T.
87746 Louca, A.
6757 Dairy Goat Journal Publishing Co., Scottsdale, AZ (EUA)
33022 3. International Conference on Goat Production and Disease Tucson, AZ (EUA) 10-15 Ene 1982
author_sort 76459 Hatjipanayiotou, M.
title In vitro digestion of mixtures of concentrate and hay using inocula from sheep and goats
title_short In vitro digestion of mixtures of concentrate and hay using inocula from sheep and goats
title_full In vitro digestion of mixtures of concentrate and hay using inocula from sheep and goats
title_fullStr In vitro digestion of mixtures of concentrate and hay using inocula from sheep and goats
title_full_unstemmed In vitro digestion of mixtures of concentrate and hay using inocula from sheep and goats
title_sort in vitro digestion of mixtures of concentrate and hay using inocula from sheep and goats
publisher Scottsdale, AZ (EUA)
publishDate 1982
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