General livestock nutrition - Lecture 148
1. Recognise the animal feeds that are given to livestock and identify the nutritional composition of common feedstuffs that are given to livestock
Nutrients:
Monosaccharides: glucose
Oligosaccharides:
Essential amino acids
Non-essential amino acids
Feedstuff:
Fresh:
Cereal grains and by-products:
Straw (in many parts of the world - poor source of nutrients)
Protein concentrates: CP ~ 25-50%- most expensive part of feed
- Protein
- Carbohydrates
- Fat
- Minerals
- Vitamins
Also need Water and some water-soluble vitamins
Main nutrient in hay = Carbohydrate
main nutrient in grass = Water
Dry Matter:
milk ~10% DM
wheat ~ 85% DM
hay ~85-90% DM
grass ~30-40% DM
banana ~60-70% DM
human ~60% DM
Sugars:
Polysaccharides:
- Most important for animal feed
- made of alpha-linked glucose molecules
- starch - storage in plants
- glycogen - storage in animals
- made of beta-linked glucose molecules
- cellulose - most abundant - only microbes can digest
- hemicellulose
- pectins
- gums
- fructins
Monosaccharides: glucose
- trioses, tetroses, pentroses, hexoses, glucose, galactose
Oligosaccharides:
- Disaccharides
- sucrose: fructose + glucose
- most abundant disaccharide
- found in animal feeds high in sugar - sugar beet, sugar beet pulp, molasses
- Maltose = 2 glucose
- main sugar found when cereals germinated
- Lactose = glucose + galactose
- milk sugar
- Trisaccharides
- Tetrasaccharides
Lignin:
- Nature's cement
- non-polysaccharide
- 3D structure gives it strength
- occurs in woody parts of plants, such as stems, trunks
- accumulates as plants mature - eg straw
- resists breakdown by any enzyme or micro-organism
Proteins:
Essential amino acids
- valine, leucine, isoleucine, threonine, methionine, phenylaline, tryptophan, lysine, histidine
- cystine can replace methionine to a certain extent
- cats and growing dogs: arginine
- cats: taurine
Non-essential amino acids
- alanine, arginine, asparagine, aspartic acid, cysteine, glutamic acid, glutamine, glycine, histidine, proline, serine, tryosine
Limiting amino acid - essential in ruminant diets
- the amino acid that is used up first in protein synthesis
- will prevent further synthesis of protein
- malnutrition will occur
- in most cases it is methionine or lysine
Lipids:
- Important for supplying energy
- added to animal feeds
- essential fatty acids
- limitations in adding to diets
Feedstuff:
Fresh:
- Grass – natural or cultivated
- Forage crops – legumes: clover Lucerne/alfalfa, Leucaena (Ipil-Ipil)
- Cereals – grown as forage crops: Sugar beet tops (sugar cane)
- Brassicas – Kales, cabbage, rapes
Roots, tubers and by-products:
- Swedes and turnips
- Sugar beet
- Sugar beet pulp
- Molasses (beet and cane)
- Potatoes
- Cassava Sweet potatoes
- Oats
- Wheat
- Barley
- Triticale
- Maize
- Sorgum
- Rye
- Millet
- Rice
- Brewing industry – Brewers grains
- Malt Culms – distilling industry
- Spent hops
- Dried brewer’s yeast
- Bran
Straw (in many parts of the world - poor source of nutrients)
- Wheat Straw
- Barley Straw
- Oat Straw
- Legume Straw
Protein concentrates: CP ~ 25-50%- most expensive part of feed
- Fishmeal
- Meat and bone meal
- Blood meal
- Milk products
- Whole milk
- Skim milk
- Whey
- Oil seed cakes and meals
- Soya bean meal
- Rape seed meal
- Linseed meal
- Cottonseed meal
- Groundnut meal
- Palm kernel meal
- Sunflower seed meal
- Seasame seed meal
- Single cell protein
Non-Protein:
- Urea
- poultry waste
2. Understand how the nutrient composition of feeds is evaluated using chemical methods
CP = the Nitrogen content of food x 6.25
(16% of food protein is Nitrogen)
Crude Fibre (CF) - Cellulose, hemicellulose, lignin (wood component, indigestible), pectin
Ash - Inorganic ash - minerals
Ether Extract (EE) - fats, oils, fat soluble vitamins
To calculate Carbs:
Nitrogen Free Extracts = 100 - (Water - Ash - CP - CF - EE)
This contains the sugar, starch, pectins, some cellulose
NDF - Natural Detergent Fibres
- cell wall constituents
- hemicellulose, cellulose, lignin
ADF - Acid Detergent Fibres
- cellulose, lignin
- in all ruminant feed
- high ADF, digestibility is low
- low ADF, digestibility is high
3. Understand how the digestibility and protein quality of feeds are evaluated using in-vivo methods
Protein Quality:
- Good quality proteins contain all essential amino acids in proportions capable of promoting growth (when only proteins in diet)
- High BV score = good quality protein
- egg BV = 100 = perfect protein quality
Biological Value (BV):
BV = amount of Nitrogen retained in the body, thus protein quality
MFN - metabolic faecal N (N in cells excreted)
EUN - Endogenous urinary N (N in cells excreted)
N secreted = mucous, urine, faeces, dead skin cells
Digestibility:
- some nutrients are better absorbed than others
- rate of passage matters - slower, more will be absorbed
- measured by the total food intake (DM) and total faecal output over a period of time
Example:
Cow ate 10kg hay containing 90% DM
She excreted 3kg faeces DM
What is the digestibility of the hay?
9kg - 3kg
------------ = .67 or 67%
9kg
Measuring digestibility in-vivo:
Example:
A sheep ate 1.63kg of hay DM.
Energy content is 18MJ/KG DM
faeces = 0.76 kg DM, energy content 18.7 MJ/kg
What is the digestible energy?
intake= 1.63 kg (18 MJ/kg) = 29.3 MJ
output= 0.76 kg (18.7 MJ/kg) = 14.2 MJ
DE = 29.3 - 24.2 = 0.52
29.3
A sheep ate 1.63kg of hay DM.
Energy content is 18MJ/KG DM
faeces = 0.76 kg DM, energy content 18.7 MJ/kg
What is the digestible energy?
intake= 1.63 kg (18 MJ/kg) = 29.3 MJ
output= 0.76 kg (18.7 MJ/kg) = 14.2 MJ
DE = 29.3 - 24.2 = 0.52
29.3
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