Ideal digesta markers used for feeding studies are inert, unabsorbable, and move with the digesta they are intended to mark. Both chromium (III) and cobalt (III) salts of EDTA (CrEDTA and CoEDTA, respectively) are used as markers of liquid digesta in dairy cattle research. A small portion is absorbed and excreted in urine, but the markers are assumed to remain unreactive and as inert salts in the digesta and animal. The degree to which these colored salts remain bound in solution can be estimated through spectrophotometric measurement at their wavelength (λ) of peak absorbance. The objective of this in vitro study was to evaluate whether CrEDTA and CoEDTA dissociate under reducing conditions that could be experienced in the rumen. In a completely randomized design with 2 replicate analytical runs and samples in duplicate within run, approximately 26 mg/L Cr from CrEDTA or Co from CoEDTA was incubated in a 26-mL reaction volume containing 20 mL of Goering and Van Soest medium without tryptone, 3 mL of CoEDTA or CrEDTA solutions, or water (reagent blanks), and 3.0 mL of a combination of distilled water with 0, 0.25, 0.50, 0.75, or 1.00 mL of reducing solution (RedSol). After incubation for 0.5 h at 39°C, absorbance was read at λ = 535, 465, and 560 nm, the peak λ for EDTA salts of Co(III), Co(II), and Cr(III), respectively. Mean reagent blank values were subtracted from CoEDTA and CrEDTA data. The absorbance data at peak λ were analyzed by marker in models that included RedSol with analytical run as a random variable. Contrasts were used to detect linear through quartic effects of RedSol. Samples with RedSol had redox potentials of -250 to -328 mV, which are within the range of reported ruminal measures. As RedSol increased, CoEDTA showed a linear decline of 75% in ABS at 535 nm and a quadratic 4-fold increase followed by a 60% decline at 465 nm. These responses indicate a reduction of Co(III) to Co(II) and subsequent dissociation of Co(II)EDTA. The absorbance of CrEDTA at 560 nm showed a tendency for an 8% linear decrease as RedSol increased. Wavescans from λ = 330 to 700 nm showed CrEDTA retaining its characteristic 2-peak pattern as RedSol increased, whereas CoEDTA curves deformed entirely. We conclude that CoEDTA is not a stable, inert digesta marker under reducing conditions achievable in the rumen and is therefore unsuitable for use in studies with ruminants. Reexamination of the suitability of available liquid digesta markers is advised.
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