Abstract
The effect of Saccharomyces cerevisiae yeast culture (YC, Yea-Sacc 1026) as a supplement to the high-roughage diet of buffalo calves on the rumen microbial populations, fermentation pattern and in sacco dry matter disappearance of dietary constituents was examined. A control group was fed a diet consisting of, on a dry matter basis, 2·12 kg bajra (Pennisetum typhoides) hay and 0·45 kg groundnut cake per day per calf, while the treatment group had the same diet plus 5 g YC. After feeding for 6 weeks, inclusion of YC was stopped and both groups were given the control diet for 2 weeks. At week 4 the pH in the rumen fluid (RF) was significantly higher (P<0·05) up to 6 h post-feeding in the treatment group compared with the control group. The concentrations of total, total viable and cellulolytic bacteria were increased by 41·0 (P<0·05), 33·5 and 57·4% (P<0·01), respectively, with YC supplement. The concentration of total volatile fatty acids (P<0·05), particularly at 4 h post-feeding (P<0·01) and acetate (P<0·01) and acetate to propionate ratio (P<0·05) were higher in the treatment compared with the control group. On YC supplementation, the concentration of NH3-N was decreased (P<0·05) while that of TCA-precipitable protein in RF was marginally but non-significantly increased. Withdrawal of YC from the diet reversed these effects and the rumen variables returned to values close to control levels after 2 weeks. The in sacco dry matter disappearance of dietary components was higher in the treatment compared with the control group, particularly during the first 24 h of incubation. © 1997 SCI.
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