4.2 Article

Comparative in vitro evaluation of forage legumes (prosopis, acacia, atriplex, and leucaena) on ruminal fermentation and methanogenesis

Journal

JOURNAL OF ANIMAL AND FEED SCIENCES
Volume 21, Issue 4, Pages 759-772

Publisher

KIELANOWSKI INST ANIMAL PHYSIOLOGY NUTRITION
DOI: 10.22358/jafs/66148/2012

Keywords

in vitro; methane; rumen fermentation; tannins; ruminants

Funding

  1. Third World of Academic Science (TWAS)
  2. National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq)

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Two experiments in vitro were conducted to evaluate four Egyptian forage legume browses, i.e., leaves of prosopis (Prosopis juliflora), acacia (Acacia saligna), atriplex (A triplex halimus), and leucaena (Leucaena leucocephala), in comparison with Tifton (Cynodon sp.) grass hay for their gas production, methanogenic potential, and ruminal fermentation using a semi-automatic system for gas production (first experiment) and for ruminal and post ruminal protein degradability (second experiment). Acacia and leucaena showed pronounced methane inhibition compared with Tifton, while prosopis and leucaena decreased the acetate:propionate ratio (P<0.01). Acacia and leucaena presented a lower (P<0.01) ruminal NH3-N concentration associated with the decreasing (P<0.01) ruminal protein degradability. Leucaena, however, showed higher (P<0.01) intestinal protein digestibility than acacia. This study suggests that the potential methanogenic properties of leguminous browses may be related not only to tannin content, but also to other factors.

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