The effect of size and density on the mean retention time of particles in reindeer (Rangifer tarandus)

Particle passage from the reticulorumen (RR) depends on particle density and size. A classic way of assessing these effects is the use of plastic markers of varying density and size that are recovered in the faeces. Here, we report results of an experiment where four fistulated reindeer (Rangifer ta...

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Veröffentlicht in:Comparative biochemistry and physiology. Part A, Molecular & integrative physiology Molecular & integrative physiology, 2024-06, Vol.292, p.111621-111621, Article 111621
Hauptverfasser: Singer, Martina, Codron, Daryl, Lechner, Isabel, Rudnik, Rebecca, Barboza, Perry, Hummel, Jürgen, Clauss, Marcus
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Particle passage from the reticulorumen (RR) depends on particle density and size. A classic way of assessing these effects is the use of plastic markers of varying density and size that are recovered in the faeces. Here, we report results of an experiment where four fistulated reindeer (Rangifer tarandus, 96 ± 12 kg) were fed two different diets (browse, voluntary dry matter intake [DMI] 70 ± 10 g/kg0.75/d; or a pelleted diet, DMI 124 ± 52 g/kg0.75/d) and dosed via fistula with 8 different particle types combining densities of 1.03, 1.22 and 1.44 g/ml and sizes of 1, 10 and 20 mm. Generally, particles that passed the digestive tract intact (not ruminated) did so relatively early after marker dosing, and therefore had shorter mean retention times (MRT) than ruminated particles. On the higher intake, the overall mean retention time (MRT) of particles was shorter, but this was not an effect of shorter MRT for either intact or ruminated particles, but due to a higher proportion of intact particles at the higher intake. This supports the concept that ruminants do not adjust chewing behaviour depending on intake, but that a lower proportion of digesta is submitted to rumination due to pressure-driven escape from the forestomach at higher gut fills. Compared to cattle (Bos primigenius taurus), muskoxen (Ovibos moschatus) and moose (Alces alces) that had received the same markers, reindeer had a lower proportion of 1 mm particles that passed intact. Our results support the concept that the critical size threshold for particles leaving the ruminant forestomach is dependent on body size. While the results likely do not represent findings peculiar for reindeer, they indicate fundamental mechanisms operating in the forestomach of ruminants. Less small particles leave the reindeer rumen intact compared to larger ruminants – indicating that the size threshold for particle release from the rumen varies with body size. [Display omitted] •Mean retention times (MRT) of particles in ruminants depend on particle density and size.•The critical size of particles that escape the reticulorumen (RR) depends on the body size of the ruminant.•Particles escaping the RR intact do so soon after ingestion, whereas particles that are ruminated are retained longer.•Higher food intake leads to shorter paricle MRT.•This is not an effect of a change of MRT for intact or ruminated particles, but of a shift in the proportion of intact vs ruminated particles.
ISSN:1095-6433
1531-4332
DOI:10.1016/j.cbpa.2024.111621