4.6 Article

Comparisons of commercially available NIRS-based analyte predictions of haylage quality for equid nutrition

Journal

ANIMAL FEED SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
Volume 283, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.anifeedsci.2021.115158

Keywords

Forage; Diet; Donkey; Equine; Analysis; Calibration; Ration; Model

Funding

  1. Donkey Sanctuary, Sidmouth, Devon, UK
  2. Devon, UK
  3. Rothamsted Research, UK Institute Strategic Programme - Soil to Nutrition [BS/E/C/000I0320]
  4. UK Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council

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Maintaining animal health and performance relies on the availability of an appropriate diet. A study comparing wet chemistry and four NIRS methods for haylage analysis revealed significant discrepancies between the results. This suggests that NIRS methods may not accurately predict analyte contents in forage samples, potentially leading to feeding forage with nutritional values outside the target range.
Maintaining animal health and performance relies on the availability of an appropriate diet. For herbivores, accurate assessment of forage nutrient quality is critical for appropriate diet formulation and rationing, including potential supplementation. Near-Infrared Reflectance Spectroscopy (NIRS) is a rapid method that is used in place of traditional chemical methodologies (wet chemistry) to predict analyte contents in forage samples. The method relies on scanning a sample with near-infrared light and predicting the analyte content by comparing the reflected spectra to a model which has been developed with samples of known analyte content measured by wet chemistry. The purpose of this study was to examine the accuracy of four NIRS-based methods on haylage from seven farm holdings compared with wet chemistry (the control). We analysed 64 samples for a range of analytes (dry matter (DM), pH, ash, acid detergent fibre expressed inclusive of residual ash (ADF), neutral detergent fibre assayed with a heat stable amylase and expressed inclusive of residual ash (aNDF), crude protein and water-soluble carbohydrate (WSC)) commonly assessed for haylage quality in equid nutrition. We compared results obtained by wet chemistry to corresponding NIRS-based predictions from four commercially available NIRS services. The results revealed large discrepancies amongst all five methods. For DM, average bias (mean +/- SD) for three reported methods was - 15.5 +/- 188.4, - 10.1 +/- 50.4, 12.9 +/- 33.8 g/kg respectively and for WSC reporting positive bias from four methods of 26.9 +/- 51.3, 24.8 +/- 38.2, 26.2 +/- 50.1 and 14.5 +/- 45.2, g/Kg respectively. The extent of these discrepancies from the wet chemistry also varied by analyte where for example, predictions for DM were more reliable than those for WSC and results demonstrated that predictions obtained by NIRS could result in feeding forage outside of target nutritional values.

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