Abstract

SUMMARYFour adult swamp buffaloes (Bubalus bubalis) and four adult Brahman cattle (Bos indicus), maintained in climate rooms, were provided ad libitum with a pelleted NaOH-treated barley straw ration (10·7 g N/kg dry matter) supplemented with sulphur, minerals and vitamins and 0, 14·5 or 22 g urea/kg. The animals were given each diet when housed at 32 °C and, in addition, were given the urea unsupplemented diet at 22 °C. All animals received all treatments for periods of 21 days, measurements being made during the last 8 days, after the animals had been given single doses of two nonabsorbable markers (Cr-fibre and Co-EDTA). Intake, digestibility and gastro-intestinal passage rate were low on the unsupplemented N-deficient (10·7 g N/kg dry matter) diet at both temperatures. Urea supplementation to provide diets of 17·3 and 20·7 g N/kg dry matter was associated with increased intake and digestibility of the feed and increased rate of passage of digesta through the gut.Despite differences in respiration rate and plasma thyroxine (T4) and triiodothyronine (T3) concentrations at the two temperatures, no effects of temperature on intakes and digestion of the unsupplemented diet were seen. Differences between species were seen in respiration rate at 32 °C and plasma T4, which were higher, and mean retention time of Cr in the gut at 22 °C and water intakes, which were lower, in Brahman cattle than in buffaloes. There were no significant species differences in response to dietary urea supplementation.

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