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A note on some comparisons between the rumen content of barley-fed steers and that of young calves also fed on a high concentrate ration

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 September 2010

J. Margaret Eadie
Affiliation:
The Rowett Research Institute, Bucksburn, Aberdeen
P. N. Hobson
Affiliation:
The Rowett Research Institute, Bucksburn, Aberdeen
S. O. Mann
Affiliation:
The Rowett Research Institute, Bucksburn, Aberdeen
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Extract

In previous work the rumen microbiology of young animals fed on a high carbohydrate ration has been considered and has tended to be fairly consistent (Eadie, Hobson and Mann, 1959; Eadie, 1962). In this note a further controlled experiment on calves weaned on to a 50:50 mixture of roughage/high concentrate mixture and on to the high concentrate alone, is reported. In view of interest in the intensive feeding of cattle on barley these results from young animals are compared with a series of observations made more recently on older animals fed predominantly on barley, since it was obvious from the outset that the physical nature of the rumen contents was different in the two age groups. The sudden introduction of large amounts of carbohydrate into the diet of animals previously fed conventionally has been shown to create profound changes in the rumen microbial population (Krogh, 1961) and the microbiology of the young concentrate-fed calf was very different from the roughage-fed animal. However, the barley-fed steers used in this work had been early weaned on to a high concentrate ration and had clearly become adapted to the adult high carbohydrate diet.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © British Society of Animal Science 1967

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References

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