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113In Situ Digestive Kinetics of Four Bermudagrass Cultivars

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While much effort has been devoted to both the characterization of ruminal fermentation dynamics and the evaluation of bermudagrass production, independently, there is a lack of information regarding ruminal digestive… Click to show full abstract

While much effort has been devoted to both the characterization of ruminal fermentation dynamics and the evaluation of bermudagrass production, independently, there is a lack of information regarding ruminal digestive kinetics using beef cattle in southern forage systems. Thus, the objective of our study was to evaluate in situ digestive kinetics of four bermudagrass (Cynodon dactylon [L.] Pers.) cultivars in heifers consuming typical southern forages. (Coastal, Tifton 44, Tifton 85, and Russell). Ruminally fistulated heifers (n = 4) were assigned randomly to one of four bermudagrass cultivars (Coastal [COS], Russell [RUS], Tifton 44 [T44], or Tifton 85 [T85]) for four 30-d in vivo periods (21-d adaptation and 9-d collection). On d 31 of periods 2 and 3, an in-situ experiment was conducted as a randomized complete block design with a 3-factor factorial treatment structure. The first factor (n = 4) was diet consumed by the animal (described above). The second factor (n = 4) was the incubated forage (same cultivars as the in vivo experiment). The third factor was incubation timepoint (n = 19; 0, 0.25, 0.50, 0.75, 1, 2, 3, 4, 8, 12, 16, 20, 24, 48, 72, 96, 120, 144, and 168 h). Four in situ bags were incubated in each animal at each timepoint; two were used for NDF, ADF, and ADL, and two were used for CP determination. Data were analyzed using SAS v. 9.4. There was a decreased (P < 0.05) potentially degradable fraction from COS (30.0%) compared with T85 (55.1%), T44 (48.1%), or RUS (47.1%). Similarly, COS presented the greatest (P < 0.05) undegradable fraction (37.0%) and T85 the least (15.9%), with RUS and T44 intermediate (25.0 and 21.9%, respectively). There was no effect of bermudagrass cultivar, however, on the rate constant of digestion (0.94%/h; P = 0.26) or lag time (3.2 h; P = 0.38). A visual appraisal of the degradation curve suggests that the asymptote of digestion was not reached at the measured 168 h. Results are interpreted to mean that T44 is the preferable bermudagrass cultivar, followed by T85 and RUS, while COS is the least favorable. Further, given the lack of visible asymptote, we speculate that bermudagrass likely passes the rumen before full digestion is realized.

Keywords: four bermudagrass; situ digestive; kinetics four; digestive kinetics; bermudagrass; bermudagrass cultivars

Journal Title: Journal of Animal Science
Year Published: 2023

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