Abstract

An attempt was done to identify some factors influencing the caecal fermentation pattern in poultry. Experiments were conducted to study effects of carbohydrate substrates (feed components and supplements) and antibiotics on the formation of volatile fatty acids (VFA) and methane in in vitro incubations of the caecal contents of 7-week-old chickens. Stoichiometry of fermentation differed in cultures with different carbohydrates. Fermentation pattern characterized by high propionate and low acetate production was found in cultures with lactose (0.447 and 0.376 mol/1 mol of VFA produced, respectively) and, to a lesser extent, also in cultures with raffinose. Acetate was the predominant metabolite of starch, pectin and xylan (0.727, 0.773 and 0.685 mol/1 mol of VFA produced, respectively). Fermentation of inulin resulted in high proportion of butyrate, 0.221 mol/1 mol of VFA. Other polysaccharides produced only 0.060–0.111 mol of butyrate per 1 mol of VFA. Oligosaccharides (lactose, raffinose) were fermented more rapidly than polysaccharides. Fermentation of inulin yielded more VFA than fermentation of starch, pectin and xylan. No production of VFA from carboxymethylcellulose was observed. On average, 11 mols of VFA were produced per mol of methane. Lasalocid significantly increased molar proportion of propionate, which is potentially beneficial from the point of view of salmonellae control. The magnitude of improvement, however, was small. Other feed antibiotics tested (avoparcin, bacitracin, lincomycin, spiramycin, tylosin, virginiamycin) produced only non-significant or marginal fermentation shifts. Formation of valerate, isoacids and methane was not significantly influenced by the substrate or by antibiotic treatment.

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