Paola Piantoni , Yairanex Roman-Garcia , Mike Messman, Christopher J. Canale , Guillermo F. Schroeder
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All cows were fed the same base diet throughout the experiment and treatments were top-dressed during the treatment period. Orthogonal contrasts were used to evaluate CTR vs. MON (RUM + MVet) and RUM vs. MVet. Compared with CTR, MON tended to increase milk yield (43.8 vs. 42.3 kg/d) but did not affect DMI or feed efficiency. The MVet treatment improved feed efficiency compared with RUM (1.70 vs. 1.58). Treatments did not affect milk fat content and yield, milk protein yield, MUN concentration, or energy-corrected milk yield. In Experiment 2, nine continuous culture fermenters were used in a randomized block design experiment with two 10-d periods. Fermenters were fed once a day approximately 100 g DM of the same diet fed in Experiment 1. Treatments were: CTR, RUM (2 mg/L MON from Rumensin® 90), and MVet (2 mg/L MON from Monovet® 90). Monensin did not affect DM, OM, NDF, ADF, and CP degradability or total VFA production (mmol/d), but decreased acetate, butyrate, and isobutyrate molar proportions and increased propionate molar proportion compared with CTR. Both sources of MON decreased acetate to propionate ratio compared with CTR (1.61 vs. 2.40). Adding MON increased daily production of propionate (74.1 vs. 108 mmol/d) and decreased that of butyrate and isobutyrate compared with CTR. Monensin supplementation decreased ammonia-N production (433 vs. 545 mg/d) compared with CTR. Overall, results indicate MON tended to increase milk yield and altered VFA profile in the rumen and in vitro, and that MVet is a suitable source of MON for dairy cows.</p></div>","PeriodicalId":7861,"journal":{"name":"Animal Feed Science and Technology","volume":"304 ","pages":"Article 115743"},"PeriodicalIF":2.5000,"publicationDate":"2023-10-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Evaluation of a new commercial source of monensin in lactating dairy cows and continuous culture fermenters\",\"authors\":\"Paola Piantoni , Yairanex Roman-Garcia , Mike Messman, Christopher J. Canale , Guillermo F. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
本试验旨在研究一种新型莫能菌素(monenin)商业来源对泌乳中期奶牛生产性能和双流连续培养发酵罐发酵参数的影响。试验1选取43头荷斯坦奶牛(25头产后,18头初产;175±97 dim;产奶量45.3±10 kg/d;692±68 kg体重;采用随机区组设计试验,协变量为15 d,治疗期为9周。治疗期的前3周为适应期,后6周用于数据收集和分析。对照组(CTR);不添加MON), rumenin®90 (RUM;350 mg/d MON (Elanco Animal Health Inc.)和Monovet®90 (MVet;350 mg/d MON (Huvepharma®Inc.)我们)。试验期间饲喂相同基础日粮,处理期间进行top- dressing。采用正交对比法评价CTR与MON (RUM + MVet)、RUM与MVet。与CTR相比,MON倾向于提高产奶量(43.8 vs 42.3 kg/d),但不影响DMI和饲料效率。与RUM相比,MVet处理提高了饲料效率(1.70比1.58)。处理不影响乳脂含量和产量、乳蛋白产量、MUN浓度或能量校正乳产量。试验2采用9个连续培养发酵罐,采用随机区组设计,分为2个10 d周期。发酵罐每天饲喂约100 g DM的试验1饲料。处理为:CTR、RUM(来自Rumensin®90的2 mg/L MON)和MVet(来自Monovet®90的2 mg/L MON)。与CTR相比,莫能菌素不影响DM、OM、NDF、ADF和CP的降解率或总VFA产量(mmol/d),但降低了乙酸、丁酸和异丁酸的摩尔比,增加了丙酸的摩尔比。与CTR相比,两种来源的MON均降低了乙酸与丙酸的比值(1.61比2.40)。与CTR相比,添加MON可提高丙酸日产量(74.1 vs 108 mmol/d),降低丁酸和异丁酸日产量。与CTR相比,添加莫能菌素降低了氨氮产量(433 vs 545 mg/d)。综上所述,MVet可提高奶牛产奶量,改变瘤胃和体外VFA分布,是奶牛较理想的MON来源。
Evaluation of a new commercial source of monensin in lactating dairy cows and continuous culture fermenters
The objective of this experiment was to evaluate a new commercial source of monensin (MON) on performance of mid-lactation dairy cows and fermentation parameters of dual-flow continuous culture fermenters. In Experiment 1, 43 Holstein cows (25 multiparous and 18 primiparous; 175 ± 97 DIM; 45.3 ± 10 kg/d milk yield; 692 ± 68 kg BW; mean ± SD) were used in a randomized block design experiment with a 15-d covariate and a 9-wk treatment period. The first 3 wk of the treatment period were considered adaptation and the last 6 wk were used for data collection and analysis. Treatments were: Control (CTR; no MON added), Rumensin® 90 (RUM; 350 mg/d MON from Elanco Animal Health Inc.), and Monovet® 90 (MVet; 350 mg/d MON from Huvepharma® Inc. US). All cows were fed the same base diet throughout the experiment and treatments were top-dressed during the treatment period. Orthogonal contrasts were used to evaluate CTR vs. MON (RUM + MVet) and RUM vs. MVet. Compared with CTR, MON tended to increase milk yield (43.8 vs. 42.3 kg/d) but did not affect DMI or feed efficiency. The MVet treatment improved feed efficiency compared with RUM (1.70 vs. 1.58). Treatments did not affect milk fat content and yield, milk protein yield, MUN concentration, or energy-corrected milk yield. In Experiment 2, nine continuous culture fermenters were used in a randomized block design experiment with two 10-d periods. Fermenters were fed once a day approximately 100 g DM of the same diet fed in Experiment 1. Treatments were: CTR, RUM (2 mg/L MON from Rumensin® 90), and MVet (2 mg/L MON from Monovet® 90). Monensin did not affect DM, OM, NDF, ADF, and CP degradability or total VFA production (mmol/d), but decreased acetate, butyrate, and isobutyrate molar proportions and increased propionate molar proportion compared with CTR. Both sources of MON decreased acetate to propionate ratio compared with CTR (1.61 vs. 2.40). Adding MON increased daily production of propionate (74.1 vs. 108 mmol/d) and decreased that of butyrate and isobutyrate compared with CTR. Monensin supplementation decreased ammonia-N production (433 vs. 545 mg/d) compared with CTR. Overall, results indicate MON tended to increase milk yield and altered VFA profile in the rumen and in vitro, and that MVet is a suitable source of MON for dairy cows.
期刊介绍:
Animal Feed Science and Technology is a unique journal publishing scientific papers of international interest focusing on animal feeds and their feeding.
Papers describing research on feed for ruminants and non-ruminants, including poultry, horses, companion animals and aquatic animals, are welcome.
The journal covers the following areas:
Nutritive value of feeds (e.g., assessment, improvement)
Methods of conserving and processing feeds that affect their nutritional value
Agronomic and climatic factors influencing the nutritive value of feeds
Utilization of feeds and the improvement of such
Metabolic, production, reproduction and health responses, as well as potential environmental impacts, of diet inputs and feed technologies (e.g., feeds, feed additives, feed components, mycotoxins)
Mathematical models relating directly to animal-feed interactions
Analytical and experimental methods for feed evaluation
Environmental impacts of feed technologies in animal production.