4.6 Article

Establishment of ruminal bacterial community in dairy calves from birth to weaning is sequential

Journal

JOURNAL OF APPLIED MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 116, Issue 2, Pages 245-257

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1111/jam.12405

Keywords

454 pyrosequencing; bacteria; dairy calves; neonate; rumen; taxonomy

Funding

  1. Midi-Pyrenees region (France)

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AimEstablishment of ruminal bacterial community in dairy calves. Methods and ResultsRumen bacterial community was analysed on 6 calves bred according to commercial practices from day one to weaning at day 83 of age, using 454 16S rRNA-based pyrosequencing. Samples taken at day 1 did not produce amplicons. Analysis of data revealed a three-stage implantation process with a progressive but important shift of composition. At day 2, the bacterial community was mainly composed of Proteobacteria (70%) and Bacteroidetes (14%), and Pasteurellaceae was the dominant family (58%). The bacterial community abruptly changed between days 2 and 3, and until day 12, dominant genera were Bacteroides (21%), Prevotella (11%), Fusobacterium (5%) and Streptococcus (4%). From 15 to 83 days, when solid food intake rapidly increased, Prevotella became dominant (42%) and many genera strongly decreased or were no longer detected. A limited number of bacteria genera correlated with feed intake, rumen volatile fatty acids and enzymatic activities. ConclusionThe ruminal bacterial community is established before intake of solid food, but solid food arrival in turn shapes this community. Significance and Impact of the StudyThis study provides insight into the establishment of calves' rumen bacterial community and suggests a strong effect of diet.

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