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Effects of exogenous amylase on the in vitro digestion kinetics of whole‐crop maize silages made from flint or dent grain type at different phenological stages grown in tropical condition.

Authors :
Silva, Abias Santos
Pereira, Luiz Gustavo Ribeiro
Pedreira, Márcio dos Santos
Machado, Fernanda Samarini
Campos, Mariana Magalhães
Cortinhas, Cristina Simões
Acedo, Tiago Sabella
Santos, Rafael Dantas
Rodrigues, João Paulo Pacheco
Maurício, Rogério Martins
Tomich, Thierry Ribeiro
Source :
Journal of Animal Physiology & Animal Nutrition; Jan2020, Vol. 104 Issue 1, p76-87, 12p
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

The effect of exogenous amylase on the in vitro rumen digestion kinetics of whole‐crop maize silage made from dent (RB9004) or flint grain type (RB9308) was evaluated at different phenological stages: soft dough (SOD), early dent (EAD), ½ milkline (½M) and ¾ milkline (¾M). Forage was harvested from 70 to 110 days after sowing. Two rumen‐cannulated cows receiving or not exogenous amylase (0.7 g/kg dry matter—DM, provided to achieve 396 kilo Novo units of amylase activity/kg of TMR DM) were used as donor of ruminal fluid. The in vitro gas production kinetics was evaluated according to a dual‐pool logistic model. The chemical composition and gas production kinetics were affected by the hybrid and phenological stages. The flint hybrid had lower range for chemical analysis among physiological stages. Harvesting at ½M and ¾M improved DM content, bromatological composition and silage quality parameters compared to dent or flint types. Amylase (i) increased methane (CH4) production and in vitro dry matter digestibility (IVDMD) in ½M stage, (ii) improved digestion kinetics by reducing lag time and increasing total gas production and fermentation rates of non‐fibrous carbohydrates (NFC) and fibrous carbohydrates (FC), and (iii) increased extent and fermentation rate of NFC and increased fermentation rate of FC fraction in whole‐crop maize silages produced from dent or flint types in all phenological stages. Harvesting between ½M and ¾M is the best phenological stage to improve chemical composition and silage quality parameters. Exogenous amylase showed improvements on fibre digestion of silages at ½M and ¾M phenological stages in both grain types of corn. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09312439
Volume :
104
Issue :
1
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Journal of Animal Physiology & Animal Nutrition
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
141289083
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/jpn.13234