Abstract
The objective of this in vitro study was to assess the effects of high-carvacrol oregano oil (ORE; 50 g/kg oregano oil, 800-802 g/kg carvacrol), on microbial fermentation and CH4 production. In the experiment (a complete randomized block design), treatments included a negative control (CTL, no additive), a positive control (monensin, MON, 10 mg/L), and ORE (20, 40, 80, 120, 200, 160, and 1000 mg/L). Compared with CTL, MON shifted (p < 0.05) volatile fatty acid (VFA) profile from acetate and butyrate to propionate production, thereby reducing (p < 0.05) CH4 production (-26%). Monensin decreased (p < 0.05) NH3 and branched-chain VFA concentrations. Of the doses evaluated, only the highest dose (1000 mg/L) affected ruminal microbial fermentation and CH4 production. At this dose, ORE reduced (p < 0.05) gas production, total VFA, acetate, propionate and NH3 concentrations, and CH4 production (-22%). The reduced gas production and total VFA is an indication of feed digestion inhibition. These results suggest that ORE may decrease CH4 production and improve ruminal N utilization. However, these findings need to be validated in vivo to determine the optimal dose to benefit from the positive effects while avoiding the negative impact of ORE on feed digestion.
Published Version
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