Abstract

The objective of this study was to evaluate the effect of dried distillers grains with solubles (DDGS) and red-osier dogwood (ROD) extract on in vitro fermentation characteristics, nutrient disappearance, and microbial profiles using the rumen simulation technique. The experiment was a completely randomized design with a 2 × 2 factorial arrangement of treatments and four replicates per treatment. A basal diet [10% barley silage, 87% dry-rolled barley grain, and 3% vitamin and mineral supplement, dry matter (DM) basis] and a DDGS diet (as per basal diet with 25% of wheat DDGS replacing an equal portion of barley grain) were supplemented with ROD extract at 0 and 1% (DM basis), respectively. The experimental period was 17 d, consisting 10 days of adaptation and 7 days of data and sample collection. The substitution of wheat DDGS for barley grain did not affect gas production; disappearances of DM, organic matter, and crude protein; total volatile fatty acid (VFA) production; and microbial protein production. However, replacing barley grain with wheat DDGS increased (P = 0.01) fermenter pH and molar proportion of branched-chain VFA, switched (P = 0.06) the fermentation pattern to higher acetate production due to increased (P = 0.01) disappearance of neutral detergent fiber (NDF), and decreased (P = 0.08) methane (CH4) production. In the basal barley diet, the ROD extract increased the acetate to propionate (A:P) ratio (P = 0.08) and reduced the disappearance of starch (P = 0.06) with no effect on any other variables. No effects of ROD in the DDGS diet were observed. The number of operational taxonomic unit (OTUs) and the Shannon diversity index of the microbial community had little variation among treatments. Taxonomic analysis revealed no effect of adding the ROD extract on the relative abundance of bacteria at the phylum level with either the basal diet or DDGS diet, while at the genus level, the microbial community was affected by the addition of both DDGS and the ROD extract. Prevotella and Fibrobacter were the most abundant genera in the basal diet; however, Treponema became the most abundant genus with the addition of the ROD extract. These results indicated that the substitution of wheat DDGS for barley grain may mitigate enteric CH4 emissions. The trend of reduced starch fermentability and increased NDF disappearance with the addition of ROD extract suggests a reduced risk of rumen acidosis and an improvement in the utilization of fiber for cattle-fed high-grain diet.

Highlights

  • Red osier dogwood (ROD; Cornus sericea) is a native shrub plant that is present across North America and is abundant in low wetlands, pasturelands, and areas where crops and forages do not grow well [1]

  • Basal diet had a lower (P = 0.01) molar proportion of branched-chain VFA (BCVFA) and valerate but a higher (P = 0.01) proportion of caproate compared to the Dried distillers grains with solubles (DDGS) diet, with the supplementation of the ROD extract reducing (P = 0.01) caproate in both diets

  • The production of NH3-N was higher (P = 0.01) with DDGS compared to the basal diet, with no observed effect of the ROD extract

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Summary

Introduction

Red osier dogwood (ROD; Cornus sericea) is a native shrub plant that is present across North America and is abundant in low wetlands, pasturelands, and areas where crops and forages do not grow well [1] This plant is rich in bioactive compounds, with total phenolic concentrations of up to 22% of dry matter (DM), including anthocyanins, gallic acid, ellagic acid, quercetin, kaempferol, and cyanin [1]. Wei et al [6] reported that feeding ROD to beef heifers that are fed high-grain diets decreased the degradability of ruminal protein (i.e., increased the rumen bypass protein) and increased blood antioxidant capacity and the immune response These authors suggested that the increase in rumen bypass protein was due to the protein-binding capacity of ROD phenols, thereby improving protein efficiency in cattle. These previous studies used raw ROD material, and to our knowledge, ROD extract and its effect on rumen fermentation have not been evaluated

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