Abstract

It was evaluated in this study the effect of the type of the diet on duodenal flow of long-chain fatty acids in steers. The tested diets were the following: conventional (feedlot diet composed of 60% corn silage and 40% of concentrate); winter forage silage - rye grass (Lolium multiflorum, Lam); or tropical forage silage - association of millet (Pennisetum americanum, Leeke + alexander grass, Brachiaria plantaginea). Six Charolais × Nellore crossbred steers with cannulas in duodenum were used in a 3 × 3 double Latin square. Dry material intake was similar among the groups (mean of 4,037 g/day), but the intake of total fatty acids and saturated fatty acids were higher in the group fed tropical pasture silage. On the other hand, the animals which received the conventional diet consumed higher quantity of unsaturated fatty acids. Tropical pasture silage provided higher consumption of vacenic acid (C18:1 t-11) and the winter forage silage offered higher consumption of conjugated linoleic acid. The intake of omega-6 fatty acids was higher in the group fed conventional diet and for omega-3, intake was higher in the group fed tropical pasture diet. The total fatty acid flow in the duodenum was not affected by the diets, but in all treatments it was higher than the consumed one. The animals fed diet with concentrate show the greatest changes on the profile of fatty acids during the ruminal fermentation. Conventional diets provide the highest intake of unsaturated fatty acids and the highest availability of vacenic acid in the small intestine, but they do not increase the supply of intestinal conjugated linoleic acid.

Highlights

  • Brazil is a country of continental extension and one of the biggest bovine meat exporter in the world (Anualpec, 2008)

  • The profile of long-chain fatty acids (FA) deposited on the body ruminative fat is variable and different from those consumed by the animal, depending mainly on the rate and extension of the ruminative biohydrogenation (Harfoot, 1981)

  • The total intake of fatty acids was similar among animals fed grass silage diet or conventional diet

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Summary

Introduction

Brazil is a country of continental extension and one of the biggest bovine meat exporter in the world (Anualpec, 2008). It presents a great variation on the systems used for the cattle breeding, mainly at the finishing stage. According to Anualpec (2008), in Brazil, 2,305,000 bovines are finished in feedlots, 872,000 on winter cultivated pastures and more than 35,000,000 on tropical pastures. These options of finishing cause variations in the quality of the meat, including aspects related to content and fat composition (Nuernberg et al, 1998). 80% of linoleic acid and 92% of linolenic acid present in the ingested food undergo saturation process (Fellner et al.,1995; Ferlay et al.,1993)

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