In Vitro Digestibility in Animal Nutritional Studies
Material type:
ArticleLanguage: English Publication details: Basel, Switzerland MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute 2020Description: 1 electronic resource (348 p.)ISBN: - books978-3-03936-460-2
 - 9783039364596
 - 9783039364602
 
- Research & information: general
 - Biology, life sciences
 - Zoology & animal sciences
 - polyethylene glycol
 - gas production
 - in vitro organic matter degradability
 - condensed tannins
 - ammonia
 - volatile fatty acid
 - in vitro assay
 - common vetch
 - grain
 - nutritive value
 - ruminants
 - field peas
 - ensiling
 - hydro-thermic treatment
 - nutrient digestibility
 - rumen-undegraded protein
 - Streptomyces griseus protease test
 - n/a
 - straw
 - varietal effect
 - corn distillers dried grains with solubles
 - gas collection technique
 - in vitro
 - pig fecal inoculum
 - soybean hulls
 - rumen liquid
 - in vitro fermentation
 - rumen degradability
 - seaweeds
 - chemical composition
 - in vitro rumen fermentation
 - goats
 - methane
 - kale
 - swede
 - volatile fatty acids
 - degradation rates
 - NDF digestibility
 - faecal inoculum
 - diet composition
 - fermentation parameters
 - microbial populations
 - microbial bases
 - odd- and branched-chain fatty acids
 - lactation stages
 - beef cattle
 - protein sources
 - camelina co-products
 - rumen microbial fermentation
 - antimethanogenic
 - chemical inhibition
 - global warming
 - halogenated compound
 - macroalgae
 - methane production
 - methanogenic inhibitor
 - plant inhibitory compound
 - forage quality
 - ruminant
 - essential oils
 - synergies
 - cereals
 - fibrous byproducts
 - gas volume
 - pH
 - gas production technique
 - in vitro digestibility
 - Mitscherlich equation
 - feedstuff evaluation
 - fermentation kinetics
 - substrate degradation
 - nitrocompounds
 - methanogenesis
 - rumen fermentation
 - microbial community
 - coenzyme
 - dietary protein
 - poultry
 - digestibility assay
 - pH stat method
 - pepsin digestibility assay
 - fermentability
 - grazing ecology
 - microbial responses
 - in vitro gas production
 - rumen
 - feed
 - meta-analysis
 - machine learning
 - neural network
 - inoculum
 - rumen fluid
 - faeces
 - enzyme
 - Ankom DaisyII incubator
 
Open Access star Unrestricted online access
This book addresses various aspects of in vitro digestibility: • Application of meta-analyses and machine learning methods to predict methane production; • Methane production of sainfoin and alfalfa; • In vitro evaluation of different dietary methane mitigation strategies; • Rumen methanogenesis, rumen fermentation, and microbial community response; • The role of condensed tannins in the in vitro rumen fermentation kinetics; • Fermentation pattern of several carbohydrate sources; • Additive, synergistic, or antagonistic effects of plant extracts; • In vitro rumen degradation and fermentation characteristics of silage and hay; • In vitro digestibility, in situ degradability, and rumen fermentation of camelina co-products; • Ruminal fermentation parameters and microbial matters to odd- and branched-chain fatty acids; • Comparison of fecal versus rumen inocula for the estimation of NDF digestibility; • Rumen inoculum collected from cows at slaughter or from a continuous fermenter; • Seaweeds as ingredients of ruminant diets; • Rumen in vitro fermentation and in situ degradation kinetics of forage Brassica crops; • In vitro digestibility and rumen degradability of vetch varieties; • Intestinal digestibility in vitro of Vicia sativa varieties; • Ruminal in vitro protein degradation and apparent digestibility of Pisum sativum; • In vitro digestibility studies using equine fecal inoculum; • Effects of gas production recording system and pig fecal inoculum volume on kinetics; • In vitro methods of assessing protein quality for poultry; and • In vitro techniques using the DaisyII incubator.
Creative Commons https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ cc https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
English
There are no comments on this title.
