Abstract

Improving the nutrition of livestock is an important aspect of global food production sustainability. This study verified whether lactic acid bacteria (LAB) inoculant could promote ensiling characteristics, nutritive value, and in vitro enteric methane (CH4) mitigation of forage sorghum (FS) mixture silage in attacking malnutrition in Zebu beef cattle. The FS at the soft dough stage, Cavalcade hay (CH), and cassava chip (CC) were obtained. The treatments were designed as a 4 × 2 factorial arrangement in a completely randomized design. Factor A was FS prepared without or with CH, CC, and CH + CC. Factor B was untreated or treated with Lactobacillus casei TH14. The results showed that all FS mixture silages preserved well with lower pH values below 4.0 and higher lactic acid contents above 56.4 g/kg dry matter (DM). Adding LAB boosted the lactic acid content of silages. After 24 h and 48 h of in vitro rumen incubation, the CC-treated silage increased in vitro DM digestibility (IVDMD) with increased total gas production and CH4 production. The LAB-treated silage increased IVDMD but decreased CH4 production. Thus, the addition of L. casei TH14 inoculant could improve lactic acid fermentation, in vitro digestibility, and CH4 mitigation in the FS mixture silages.

Highlights

  • Improving the nutrition of livestock is an important aspect of global food production sustainability

  • In this study (Table 1), the counts of lactic acid bacteria (LAB) in forage sorghum (FS), Cavalcade hay (CH), and cassava chip (CC) were lower than aerobic bacteria and yeast counts were

  • These results agreed with Cai et al.[5], who indicated FS had low LAB counts (< 1­ 04 cfu/g fresh matter (FM))

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Improving the nutrition of livestock is an important aspect of global food production sustainability. This study verified whether lactic acid bacteria (LAB) inoculant could promote ensiling characteristics, nutritive value, and in vitro enteric methane ­(CH4) mitigation of forage sorghum (FS) mixture silage in attacking malnutrition in Zebu beef cattle. The addition of L. casei TH14 inoculant could improve lactic acid fermentation, in vitro digestibility, and ­CH4 mitigation in the FS mixture silages. Pholsen et al.[1] demonstrated FS-mixture silage production by adding two neighboring crops, Cavalcade hay (CH) at 15% inclusion rate and dry cassava chip (CC) at 10% inclusion rate, to improve the nutritive levels, such as CP and metabolizable energy (ME) contents for maintaining animals’ requirements. This paper hypothesizes that alternative ingredients and LAB additive might alter ensiling characteristics and in vitro ruminal utilization of FS mixture silage, leading to enhanced Zebu beef cattle by improving

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call