CQUniversity
Browse

Supplementation of cattle fed tropical grasses with microalgae increases microbial protein production and average daily gain

journal contribution
posted on 2021-05-16, 22:59 authored by Diogo Fleury Azevedo CostaDiogo Fleury Azevedo Costa, SP Quigley, P Isherwood, SR McLennan, DP Poppi
A series of 3 experiments were conducted to evaluate the use of microalgae as supplements for ruminants consuming low-CP tropical grasses. In Exp. 1, the chemical composition and in vitro protein degradability of 9 algae species and 4 protein supplements were determined. In Exp. 2, rumen function and microbial protein (MCP) production were determined in Bos indicus steers fed speargrass hay alone or supplemented with Spirulina platensis, Chlorella pyrenoidosa, Dunaliella salina, or cottonseed meal (CSM). In Exp. 3, DMI and ADG were determined in B. indicus steers fed speargrass hay alone or supplemented with increasing amounts of NPN (urea combined with ammonia sulfate), CSM, or S. platensis. In Exp. 1, the CP content of S. platensis and C. pyrenoidosa (675 and 580 g/kg DM) was highest among the algae species and higher than the other protein supplements evaluated, and Schizochytrium sp. had the highest crude lipid (CL) content (198 g/kg DM). In Exp. 2, S. platensis supplementation increased speargrass hay intake, the efficiency of MCP production, the fractional outflow rate of digesta from the rumen, the concentration of NH3N, and the molar proportion of branched-chain fatty acids in the rumen fluid of steers above all other treatments. Dunaliella salina acceptance by steers was low and this resulted in no significant difference to unsupplemented steers for all parameters measured for this algae supplement. In Exp. 3, ADG linearly increased with increasing supplementary N intake from both S. platensis and NPN, with no difference between the 2 supplements. In contrast, ADG quadratically increased with increasing supplementary N intake from CSM. It was concluded that S. platensis and C. pyrenoidosa may potentially be used as protein sources for cattle grazing low-CP pastures. © 2016 American Society of Animal Science. All rights reserved.

Funding

Category 1 - Australian Competitive Grants (this includes ARC, NHMRC)

History

Volume

94

Issue

5

Start Page

2047

End Page

2058

Number of Pages

12

eISSN

1525-3163

ISSN

0021-8812

Location

United States

Publisher

Oxford University Press

Language

eng

Peer Reviewed

  • Yes

Open Access

  • No

Acceptance Date

2016-03-08

External Author Affiliations

The University of Queensland

Era Eligible

  • Yes

Medium

Print

Journal

Journal of Animal Science