Blood serum mineral element concentrations of weaned Montana ram lambs and their relationship with water quality characteristics

Clinical and subclinical trace mineral deficiencies can limit productivity in western sheep production systems. The objective of this research was to determine the proportion of ranches that supplemented with trace minerals and to quantify serum trace mineral concentrations in ram lambs after weanin...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Professional animal scientist 2018-10, Vol.34 (5), p.410-420
Hauptverfasser: Page, C.M., Murphy, T.W., Van Emon, M.L., Bowman, J.G.P., Wyffels, S.A., Stewart, W.C.
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container_end_page 420
container_issue 5
container_start_page 410
container_title The Professional animal scientist
container_volume 34
creator Page, C.M.
Murphy, T.W.
Van Emon, M.L.
Bowman, J.G.P.
Wyffels, S.A.
Stewart, W.C.
description Clinical and subclinical trace mineral deficiencies can limit productivity in western sheep production systems. The objective of this research was to determine the proportion of ranches that supplemented with trace minerals and to quantify serum trace mineral concentrations in ram lambs after weaning across Montana with particular emphasis on Se and Zn. Serum samples (n = 214) were collected from ram lambs 8 to 10 mo of age (52.8 ± 16 kg) at 21 ranches throughout Montana and analyzed for Co, Cu, Fe, Mn, Mo, Se, and Zn. Ranches were classified as deficient, marginally deficient, adequate, or excessive by flock mean serum trace mineral concentrations. Additionally, water samples were analyzed for pertinent characteristics. The median and interquartile range of serum concentrations for each trace mineral across ranches were as follows: Co (0.41 ng/mL; 0.90 ng/mL), Cu (0.79 μg/mL; 0.24 μg/mL), Fe (153 μg/dL; 52 μg/dL), Mn (1.70 ng/mL; 0.80 ng/mL), Mo (15.3 ng/mL; 19.3 ng/mL), Se (115 ng/mL; 97.5 ng/mL), and Zn (0.70 μg/mL, 0.19 μg/mL). Of ranches surveyed, 67% provided a trace mineral supplement. Ranches that provided supplementary trace mineral had greater serum Se concentrations (P < 0.001). The 2 most commonly deficient and marginally deficient minerals across Montana were Se (19% of ranches deficient; 23.8% of ranches marginally deficient) and Zn (9.5% of ranches deficient; 57.1% of ranches marginally deficient). Regionally, Se serum samples classified as deficient were all located in western Montana. Of ranches sampled, 40 and 35% of water samples exceeded upper desired concentrations for Na and sulfates, respectively.
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The objective of this research was to determine the proportion of ranches that supplemented with trace minerals and to quantify serum trace mineral concentrations in ram lambs after weaning across Montana with particular emphasis on Se and Zn. Serum samples (n = 214) were collected from ram lambs 8 to 10 mo of age (52.8 ± 16 kg) at 21 ranches throughout Montana and analyzed for Co, Cu, Fe, Mn, Mo, Se, and Zn. Ranches were classified as deficient, marginally deficient, adequate, or excessive by flock mean serum trace mineral concentrations. Additionally, water samples were analyzed for pertinent characteristics. The median and interquartile range of serum concentrations for each trace mineral across ranches were as follows: Co (0.41 ng/mL; 0.90 ng/mL), Cu (0.79 μg/mL; 0.24 μg/mL), Fe (153 μg/dL; 52 μg/dL), Mn (1.70 ng/mL; 0.80 ng/mL), Mo (15.3 ng/mL; 19.3 ng/mL), Se (115 ng/mL; 97.5 ng/mL), and Zn (0.70 μg/mL, 0.19 μg/mL). Of ranches surveyed, 67% provided a trace mineral supplement. Ranches that provided supplementary trace mineral had greater serum Se concentrations (P &lt; 0.001). The 2 most commonly deficient and marginally deficient minerals across Montana were Se (19% of ranches deficient; 23.8% of ranches marginally deficient) and Zn (9.5% of ranches deficient; 57.1% of ranches marginally deficient). Regionally, Se serum samples classified as deficient were all located in western Montana. 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The objective of this research was to determine the proportion of ranches that supplemented with trace minerals and to quantify serum trace mineral concentrations in ram lambs after weaning across Montana with particular emphasis on Se and Zn. Serum samples (n = 214) were collected from ram lambs 8 to 10 mo of age (52.8 ± 16 kg) at 21 ranches throughout Montana and analyzed for Co, Cu, Fe, Mn, Mo, Se, and Zn. Ranches were classified as deficient, marginally deficient, adequate, or excessive by flock mean serum trace mineral concentrations. Additionally, water samples were analyzed for pertinent characteristics. The median and interquartile range of serum concentrations for each trace mineral across ranches were as follows: Co (0.41 ng/mL; 0.90 ng/mL), Cu (0.79 μg/mL; 0.24 μg/mL), Fe (153 μg/dL; 52 μg/dL), Mn (1.70 ng/mL; 0.80 ng/mL), Mo (15.3 ng/mL; 19.3 ng/mL), Se (115 ng/mL; 97.5 ng/mL), and Zn (0.70 μg/mL, 0.19 μg/mL). Of ranches surveyed, 67% provided a trace mineral supplement. 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source Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Agricultural production
Blood
Copper
Iron
Manganese
Minerals
Molybdenum
Montana
ram lamb
Selenium
Sheep
Trace minerals
Water analysis
Water quality
Water sampling
Weaning
Zinc
title Blood serum mineral element concentrations of weaned Montana ram lambs and their relationship with water quality characteristics
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