Effects of feeding ryegrass of varying maturity on the metabolism and composition of lipids in the rumen of sheep
- 1 June 1986
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in The Journal of Agricultural Science
- Vol. 106 (3), 445-448
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0021859600063310
Abstract
Summary: Two experiments were carried out to test the effects of ryegrass maturity on rumen lipid metabolism. In the first experiment the effect of stage of maturity of perennial ryegrass on lipid metabolism in the rumen was studied with grazing sheep fitted with rumen cannulae. The pasture was either immature (13·8% crude protein), mature (8·1% crude protein) or senescent (5·5% crude protein).The ratesin vitroof triacyl glycerol lipolysis and linoleic acid (18: 2w6) hydrogenation were found to decrease with increasing age of the ryegrass.In the second experiment the sheep were dosed with emulsified linseed oil (30 g) via rumen cannulae while grazing immature or senescent ryegrass and the rumen digesta and blood plasma sampled at 0, 4 and 8 h after dosing.The proportions of linseed oil retained in the rumen were greater and blood plasma linoleic (18:2w6) and linolenic (18:3w3) acid concentrations higher when senescent ryegrass was fed.It was concluded that the rates of rumen lipolysis and hydrogenation decreased with the age of pasture and that after dosing with linseed oil the polyunsaturated fatty acid concentrations in blood plasma increased.This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- The effects of dietary starch and fibre on thein vitrorates of lipolysis and hydrogenation by sheep rumen digestaThe Journal of Agricultural Science, 1985
- The effect of dietary N onin vitrolipolysis and fatty acid hydrogenation in rumen digesta from sheep fed diets high in starchThe Journal of Agricultural Science, 1983
- Effects of dietary N on lipids of rumen digesta, plasma, liver, muscle and perirenal fat in sheepThe Journal of Agricultural Science, 1982
- Microbial Ecology and Activities in the Rumen: Part ICRC Critical Reviews in Microbiology, 1982
- The occurrence of C13 to C31 branched‐chain fatty acids in the faeces of sheep fed rye grass, and of C12 to C34 normal acids in both the faeces and the rye grassJournal of the Science of Food and Agriculture, 1978
- Depot fatty acids of Aberdeen Angus and Friesian cattle reared on hay and barley dietsThe Journal of Agricultural Science, 1977
- Effect of Low-Roughage Diets on the Microflora and Lipid Metabolism in the RumenApplied Microbiology, 1972
- Factors affecting the polyunsaturated fatty acid content of the plasma lipids of sheepBritish Journal of Nutrition, 1968