4.6 Article

Effects of rumen degradable starch on growth performance, carcass, rumen fermentation, and ruminal VFA absorption in growing goats

Journal

ANIMAL FEED SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
Volume 299, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.anifeedsci.2023.115618

Keywords

RDS; Rumen fermentation; Rumen papilla; Growth; Carcass; Goats

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The effects of dietary rumen degradable starch level on growth, carcass performance, rumen fermentation, and rumen papillae development in growing goats were investigated. High rumen degradable starch diet led to reductions in weight gain, lean meat percentage, and meat to bone ratio, while increasing feed conversion ratio. It also affected rumen fermentation, decreased rumen papillae development, and down-regulated the expression of important genes, resulting in decreased growth performance.
The objective of the present study was to investigate the effects of dietary rumen degradable starch level (RDS) on growth and carcass performance, rumen fermentation, and rumen papillae development in growing goats. Forty healthy, weaned, 3-month-old male goats (BW=13.6 +/- 0.23 kg) were randomly enrolled to receive either a low rumen degradable starch diet (LRDS, diet based on whole corn, RDS = 13.85 %, n = 20) or high rumen degradable starch diet (HRDS, diet based on crashed corn, RDS = 20.74 %, n = 20). After 90 d of feeding, 8 goats of each group were randomly selected and humanely slaughtered at 3 h after morning feeding. HRDS diet decreased the average daily weight gain, lean meat percentage of carcass, and the ratio of meat to bone (P < 0.05), whereas HRDS diet increased the feed conversion ratio (P < 0.05). HRDS diet decreased the plasma glucose level before morning feeding and 6 h postprandial (P < 0.05), and increasing the plasma glucose level at 2 h postprandial (P < 0.05). HRDS diet up-regulated rumen acetate proportion before morning feeding to 8 h postprandial (P < 0.05) and down-regulated the butyrate proportion before morning feeding to 4 h postprandial (P < 0.05). HRDS diet also increased the ratio of acetate to propionate during 6 h (P < 0.05) to 8 h postprandial (0.05 < P < 0.10). HRDS diet decreased the length and the surface area of rumen papilla (P < 0.05). Further, HRDS diet decreased the mRNA expression of HCO3- /volatile fatty acid (VFA) cotransporter SLC4A2 and SLC26A3, and Na+/HCO3- cotransporter SLC4A4 (P < 0.05). In summary, feeding HRDS diet to growing goats changed rumen fermentation, reduced rumen papilla development, rumen epithelial VFA absorption, and the capacity to maintain the rumen epithelial homeostasis, thereby decreasing the supply of precursors for hepatic gluconeogenesis and repressing the goats' performance. These findings provided further insights for improving growth performance by reducing dietary RDS in goats' diets.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available