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Use of the in vitro cumulative gas production technique for pigs: An examination of alterations in fermentation products and substrate losses at various time points1
- Source :
- Journal of Animal Science, 84(5), 1110-1118, Journal of Animal Science 84 (2006) 5
- Publication Year :
- 2006
- Publisher :
- Oxford University Press (OUP), 2006.
-
Abstract
- An experiment was conducted to examine changes in VFA and ammonia concentrations at different time points using 4 fermentable carbohydrate-rich feed ingredients as substrates and feces of unweaned piglets as inoculum. Fecal inoculum was collected, pooled, and mixed from 9 specially raised (no creep feed or antibiotics) crossbred piglets at 3 wk of age. Inulin, lactulose, molasses-free sugar beet pulp, and wheat starch were used as substrates and were fermented in vitro for 72 h (3 replicates per substrate). Cumulative gas production was measured as an indicator of the kinetics of fermentation. In addition, 3 bottles of substrate per time point with similar contents (amounts of substrate, inoculum, and media) were incubated but were allowed to release their gas throughout incubation. For these latter bottles, fermentation fluid was sampled at incubation time points including every hour between 1 and 24 h and at 48 h, and fermentation end products (VFA, lactate, and ammonia) and OM disappearance were measured. Dry matter and ash were analyzed from the postfermentative samples. The pH of the contents from these bottles was also recorded. The correlation in time between fermentation end products and cumulative gas produced was determined. The results showed that the prolongation of fermentation to 72 h, especially in the case of fast-fermenting inulin and lactulose, may lead to a different end product profile (P < 0.001) compared with the profile observed at the time at which most of the substrate has disappeared. Therefore, we concluded that the fermentation product profile at the end of in vitro fermentation at a specific time point cannot be used to compare fermentability of carbohydrate sources with different fermentation kinetics in terms of gas production.
- Subjects :
- Animal Nutrition
large-intestine
Starch
Silage
rumen fluid
Inulin
chemistry.chemical_compound
Lactulose
Genetics
medicine
Dry matter
Food science
production profiles
Incubation
food and beverages
Substrate (chemistry)
General Medicine
Diervoeding
chemistry
Biochemistry
kinetics
fractions
WIAS
ruminant feeds
Animal Science and Zoology
Fermentation
silage
Food Science
medicine.drug
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 15253163 and 00218812
- Volume :
- 84
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of Animal Science
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....2d1afaf2c70438dcfea50b63ef5cbc87
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.2527/2006.8451110x