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Improving the nutritive value of barley straw for ruminants : effects of treatment with ligninase enzyme or white-rot fungi on composition and digestibility in vitroKhazaal, Kamal Abdul-Rahim January 1990 (has links)
No description available.
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Strategies for utilisation of maize stover and thinnings as dry season feed for dairy cows in KenyaMethu, Joseph Njoroge January 1998 (has links)
No description available.
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Use of cow faeces to provide micro-organisms for the in vitro digestibility assay of foragesAkhter, Shajeda January 1994 (has links)
No description available.
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Mycotoxins in sorghum grain : with particular reference to the toxic metabolites of Alternaria speciesJohn, Anthony Edwin January 1990 (has links)
No description available.
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Effects of probiotic preparations on porcine small intestinal functionCollington, Georgina K. January 1990 (has links)
No description available.
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Approaches to the synthesis of biotin and 2'-deoxysugarsBrackenridge, Ian January 1991 (has links)
No description available.
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Studies of the effects of probiotics on the health and perforamnce of ruminantsShujaa, Taher Adedulatif January 1989 (has links)
No description available.
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The development of an in vitro system for predicting nutrient digestibility in feeds for pigsDrake, Anthony Philip January 1990 (has links)
The feed industry urgently requires an in vitro system for routine evaluation of the nutrient digestibility of a wide range of feedstuffs. The aim of this project was to ascertain the critical elements of the digestive system for the development of an in vitro simulation of protein and carbohydrate digestion to the terminal ileum and of carbohydrate fermentation in the hindgut. Standard ileal (using T-cannulated pigs) and whole gut digestibility data were obtained for soyabean, rape seed and sunflower seed meals, maize and wheat. Significant microbial activity was measured proximal to the caecum but an estimation of its effect on the availablility of nutrients was inconclusive. The in vitro system was developed by examining the digestive potential of individual enzymic stages of digestion and building up a simulation with the least number of elements necessary. Dialysis was used as a method of separating the products of digestion from the undigested remains. The crude protein digestibility of soyabean and rapeseed meal and the lysine digestibility of rapeseed meal were significantly affected by the molecular weight cut-off of the dialysis membrane. In the case of the cereals the presence of starch, variation in particle size and the fact that the storage protein was relatively inaccessible to enzyme action necessitated the inclusion of a high temperature amylase predigestion to the in vitro system. The measurement of crude protein digestibility after 12 hours dialysis (X) compared with apparent crude protein digestibility (Y) and true crude protein digestibility (Y) gave the linear regression equationsY = 0.022980 + 0.915562X (r = 0.878)Y = 0.0229635 + 0.701886X (r = 0.790) respectively. The prediction of essential amino acid digestibility was poor. The best correlation coefficients were obtained after 13 hours dialysis for apparent (r = 0.144) and true (r = 0.229) essential amino acid digestibility. Preliminary work is presented concerning the development of an assay to simulate hindgut fermentation.
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Enzyme treated Lupinus spp. seeds as an alternative source of protein for broilersOliveira, Maria Isabel Ferraz de January 1998 (has links)
The studies reported in this thesis were carried out to evaluate the effects of enzyme treatment on the nutritive value of three lupin species (L. luteus, L. albus and L. angustifolius) and evaluate their suitability as a source of protein for growing broilers. Some preliminary in vitro work on the effect of quinolizidine alkaloids on bacteria from poultry excreta was carried out. Furthermore the use of near infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) as an alternative technique for assessing the chemical composition and nutritive value (such as metabolizable energy and digestibilities) was investigated. Compositional analyses of the various lupins, fractions and diets were conducted. The chemical composition of the lupin seeds used in this study showed a high crude protein content and a variable content in ether extract and neutral detergent fibre. The alkaloid content of the seeds was determined and allowed the classification of the lupin into bitter (L. luteus cv Cardiga), semi-sweet (L. albus cv Estoril) and sweet (L. albus from France and L. angustifolius from Australia) seeds. Alkaloids from lupins decrease feed consumption and may affect the digestive capacity of the animal. A preliminary study on the effects of sparteine and alkaloids extracted from L. luteus seeds on bacteria from poultry excreta indicated that extracts of alkaloids from L. luteus had an inhibitory effect on coliform growth that was not, however, as great as that of sparteine. Sparteine, essentially prevented growth of coliforms at concentrations of 10 g dm-3. Lactobacilli were apparently not directly affected by the lupin extract of alkaloid or the isolated sparteine. This in vitro work suggests that it may be possible to influence the gut microflora in a beneficial manner by using the appropriate concentration of the appropriate alkaloids. A set of tube feeding experiments (by gavage) were carried out to evaluate the effect of different enzymes on the nutritive value of L. luteus (cv. Cardiga) and L. albus (cv. Estoril) seeds. The first experiment was a preliminary one which allowed the modification of the tube feeding assay in order to suit the characteristics of the test materials used in this study. The following six experiments tested the effects of pre-incubation, as a wet mash, of a polygalacturonase, five proteases, a pectinase and an [Special character omitted]-galactosidase at variable levels, on the nutritive value of L. luteus (cv Cardiga) and L. albus (cv. Estoril). The nutritive value of the lupin seeds was evaluated essentially by measuring metabolizable energy (ME) and amino acid (AA) digestibilities. Results indicated that L. albus seeds, irrespective of enzyme treatment, had a higher ME expressed as TMEn than L. luteus seeds. Carbohydrase containing enzyme preparations, caused variable improvements in the ME value of lupin seeds. Polygalacturonase caused a significant increase in the ME of L. luteus seeds, which may have been mediated by an increase in protein digestibility as shown by improvements in the AA digestibility. Increased concentrations of pectinase tended to be more effective in the improvement of ME of L. albus, while increasing concentrations of a-galactosidase were so for L. luteus. The fact that the carbohydrases acted differently upon the two lupin species was probably due to their different concentration in constituent carbohydrates. Pre-incubation with exogenous proteases decreased the ME of the lupin seeds. The reasons for the depression were not clear, however high concentrations of proteases, expressed as U kg-1 of lupin seeds, may have interfered with the gastro intestinal tract and also with the endogenous enzymes of the bird resulting in reduced utilisation of the pre-incubated material. A growth experiment was design to investigate the effects of the inclusion of L. luteus (cv. Cardiga), L. albus (from France) or L. angustifolius (from Australia) as the main or secondary source of protein in diets for growing broilers. Lupin seeds were either pre-incubated as a wet mash, or the lupin containing diets were supplemented with a carbohydrase, a protease or a mixture of both. Diets were fed to the animals over a three week period. The results obtained tended to support the hypothesis that the enzymes had little effect on the other dietary ingredients but had their main effects on the lupins in the diets.
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Selection of roughage diets by sheep and goatsHadjigeorgiou, Ioannis E. January 1996 (has links)
The objective of the present work was to elucidate some of the possible choice determinants involved in diet selection by sheep and goats. The first experiment investigated the ingestive and digestive responses of these two species to a range of forage chemical composition attributes (i.e. nitrogen and fibre content). Forage DM intake was positively associated with their nutritive quality. Goats had higher voluntary DM intakes (P<0.05) and lower apparent digestibility coefficients (P<0.001) for any given forage than sheep, but the intake of digestible DM was similar for the two species. When forages were offered in pairs in a preference trial, the two species ranked forages similarly by favouring those of higher nutritive quality. The second experiment investigated the effects of different staple lengths of a single hay on the ingestive and digestive responses of sheep and goats. Goats had higher voluntary DM intakes (P<0.05) and lower apparent digestibility coefficients (P<0.001) for any given length than sheep, but the intake of digestible DM was similar for the two species. Goats allocated less time (P<0.001) than sheep to chewing the feed consumed and the mean retention time of the undigested residues in the animals' digestive tract was significantly shorter (P<0.01) for goats than sheep. When staple lengths of the grass hay were offered in pairs none of them was favoured and the choices were not significantly different between goats and sheep. In a third experiment a new method of feed presentation was developed and compared with conventional feed-bins. Goats had higher voluntary intakes than sheep (P<0.05), whereas there was no effect of the feed presentation method on DM intake.
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