The Rumen Flashcards

1
Q

The purpose of fermentation

A
  • Transforms forage into simple sugars that rumen microorganisms can use for growth
  • Cellulose cell wall broken by rumen microbes
  • Produces VFAs (volatile fatty acids) major energy source
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2
Q

What do microbes provide for ruminants?

A
  • Cellulose digestion
  • Provision of organic acids
  • Protein provision
  • Provision of B vitamins
  • Detoxifying compounds
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3
Q

What are VFAs + examples

A

Volatile fatty acids are short chained fatty acids, such as:
- Propionate
- Butyrate
- Acetate

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4
Q

3 Phases of Rumen development

A
  • Pre-ruminant
  • Transitional
  • Ruminant
    Moving from mono-gastric to ruminant
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5
Q

Pre-ruminant phase (monogastric)

A
  • Oesophageal Groove; mucular structure forms a tube that allows milk to go straight to abomasum
  • Prevents milk being fermented
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6
Q

Milk Replacement

A
  • 5-6 litres of milk
  • 13-15% of calf birth weight daily
  • Minimum of two feeds
  • Digested in abomasum
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7
Q

Feeding concentrates

A

From 3-4 days old
- Digested in rumen
- Produces butyrate & propionate
- Increases papillae number
- High energy reduces gut-fill

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8
Q

Feeding concentrates alone

A
  • Causes hyperkeratinisation
  • Causes clumping of papillae
  • Decreases rumen motility
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9
Q

Increasing size of rumen and muscular growth

A

Feeding fibre, forages (hay)
Produces acetate

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10
Q

Summarise balance of feeding calves for rumen development

A
  • Feeding concentrates; VFA production
    causes papillae development
  • Feeding forages; bulk, rumination maximises size of rumen
  • Calf starter by 3 days old, rumen development takes 21 days
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11
Q

Challenges with breaking down fibre

A
  • Fibre is a polysaccharide
  • Glucans are beta-linked (cellulose)
  • Mammalian enzymes can’t break these down
  • Need to be fermented
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12
Q

What is in the ecosystem of the rumen?

A
  • Bacteria 10 billion/ml
  • Protozoa 1 million/ml
  • Fungi 1000/ml
    These microbes are free in liquid, attached to feed or lining of the rumen
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13
Q

Retention in the forestomach

A
  • Must be a long retention time in forestomach because fermentation is a long process
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14
Q

Reticulum structure & function

A
  • Honeycomb appearance
  • Mechanical grinding and stores non-food objects
  • Traps large food particles
  • Regurgitation of ingesta
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15
Q

Omasum strucure & function

A
  • Contains many leaves like a book; their function is to squeeze water out of feed
  • Water absorption & helps to grind up food particles
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16
Q

Abomasum structure & function

A
  • Glandular equivalent to mono-gastric stomach
  • J- shaped
  • Acid digestion; not a holding chamber
17
Q

Eructation

A

Belching; removes fermentation gases
Every second ruminal contraction
Methane is the main gas

18
Q

Saliva’s importance in rumination

A
  • Neutralises 30% of acid produced in rumen
  • pH of 8.2
  • high phosphate content ( for microbial growth)
19
Q

What happens to the VFA’s?

A
  • 70-80% absorbed from the reticulorumen
  • 14-18% absorbed from the abomasum
  • 3-11% of fermented energy lost as methane
    Transported to liver for processing
20
Q

Degradation of protein

A
  • Breaks protein down into AAs
  • Bacteria absorb and use some of the AAs to grow and live
  • Byproducts are ammonia and VFAs- deamination
21
Q

Rumen degradable protein (RDP)

A
  • Feeds rumen bacteria
  • Ensures adequate supply of microbial protein
22
Q

Rumen undegradable protein (RUP/RUDP)

A
  • Passes through rumen unchanged
  • digested in small intestine