Effects of oat hay and leguminous forage mixture feeding on enteric methane emission, energy utilization, and feed conversion efficiency in male crossbred Simmental beef cattle

Dietary manipulation has the potential to mitigate methane (CH4) emission and to maintain or enhance livestock productivity. We conducted two experiments to investigate the effects of replacing oat hay by leguminous forages (alfalfa hay [AH], 0, 8, 16, and 24%, experiment 1; common vetch hay [CVH],...

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Veröffentlicht in:Animal science journal 2020-01, Vol.91 (1), p.e13472-n/a
Hauptverfasser: Du, Wuchen, Hou, Fujiang, Tsunekawa, Atsushi, Kobayashi, Nobuyuki, Peng, Fei, Ichinohe, Toshiyoshi
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Dietary manipulation has the potential to mitigate methane (CH4) emission and to maintain or enhance livestock productivity. We conducted two experiments to investigate the effects of replacing oat hay by leguminous forages (alfalfa hay [AH], 0, 8, 16, and 24%, experiment 1; common vetch hay [CVH], 0, 10, 20, and 30%, experiment 2) on energy metabolism of crossbred Simmental cattle. In experiment 1, total volatile fatty acid (VFA) concentrations increased quadratically with increasing AH proportions (p = .006) with a forage‐to‐concentrate ratio of approximately 50:50, whereas the CH4 energy to gross energy intake ratio (CH4‐E:GEI) was significantly lower with 16% AH compared with 24% AH diet (p  .05); however, CH4‐E:GEI was significantly lower in the 30% CVH diet compared with the 10% CVH diet (p 
ISSN:1344-3941
1740-0929
DOI:10.1111/asj.13472