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Title: | Urea supplementation in rumen and post-rumen for cattle fed a low-quality tropical forage |
Keywords: | Post-ruminal supplementation Gastrointestinal tract Neutral-detergent fibre Non-protein N Organic matter Urea N entry rate Volatile fatty acids Bovinos - Alimentação Suplementação alimentar Uréia na suplementação de ruminantes Trato gastrointestinal Fibra em detergente neutro Matéria orgânica Ácidos graxos voláteis |
Issue Date: | Jun-2020 |
Publisher: | Cambridge University Press |
Citation: | OLIVEIRA, C. V. R. de et al. Urea supplementation in rumen and post-rumen for cattle fed a low-quality tropical forage. British Journal of Nutrition, Cambridge, v. 124, n. 11, p. 1166-1178, Dec. 2020. DOI: 10.1017/S0007114520002251. |
Abstract: | We evaluated the differences between the supplementation of urea in rumen and/or abomasum on forage digestion, N metabolism and urea kinetics in cattle fed a low-quality tropical forage. Five Nellore heifers were fitted with rumen and abomasum fistulas and assigned to a Latin square design. The treatments were control, continuous infusion of urea in the abomasum (AC), continuous infusion of urea in the rumen, a pulse dose of urea in the rumen every 12 h (PR) and a combination of PR and AC. The control exhibited the lowest (P < 0·10) faecal and urinary N losses, which were, overall, increased by supplementation. The highest urinary N losses (P < 0·10) were observed when urea was either totally or partially supplied as a ruminal pulse dose. The rumen N balance was negative for the control and when urea was totally supplied in the abomasum. The greatest microbial N production (P < 0·10) was obtained when urea was partially or totally supplied in the abomasum. Urea supplementation increased (P < 0·10) the amount of urea recycled to the gastrointestinal tract and the amount of urea-N returned to the ornithine cycle. The greatest (P < 0·10) amounts of urea-N used for anabolism were observed when urea was totally and continuously infused in the abomasum. The continuous abomasal infusion also resulted in the highest (P < 0·10) assimilation of microbial N from recycling. The continuous releasing of urea throughout day either in the rumen or abomasum is able to improve N accretion in the animal body, despite mechanism responsible for that being different. |
URI: | https://doi.org/10.1017/S0007114520002251 http://repositorio.ufla.br/jspui/handle/1/46768 |
Appears in Collections: | DZO - Artigos publicados em periódicos |
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