In ruminants, excess dietary sulfur can be associated with a reduction in DM intake, poor feedlot performance and sulfur-associated polioencephalomalacia. Bismuth subsalicylate (BSS) has been shown to decrease hydrogen sulfide in vitro. The objective of this experiment was to evaluate effects of BSS inclusion (0 or 0.5% of diet DM) and dietary sulfur (0.21 or 0.42% of diet DM) on microbial fermentation in continuous culture. Treatments were arranged in a 2 × 2 factorial design. Eight dual-flow continuous culture fermenters were used during 2 consecutive 10-d periods consisting of 7 d for stabilization followed by 3 d of sampling. A pelleted feedlot diet containing 39% dry rolled corn, 32% earlage, 21% wet distillers grains, 3.2% corn silage, 1.5% soybean meal, 0.6% urea and 2.7% mineral premix (DM basis) was provided as substrate for microbes at a rate of 75 g of DM × fermenter × d. Effluents from sampling days were composited by fermenter within period, resulting in 4 replicates/treatment. Bismuth subsalicylate inclusion decreased ( < 0.01) true OM digestion, while no effects were observed for NDF and ADF digestion. Total VFA concentrations, molar proportions of acetic, propionic, and branched-chained VFA decreased ( < 0.01) with BSS addition. The ratio of acetic to propionic acid and the molar proportion of butyric acid increased ( < 0.01) with BSS addition. In regard to nitrogen metabolism, BSS increased NH-N concentration, NH-N and dietary-N flows ( < 0.01), and decreased non-NH-N flow, microbial-N flow, CP degradation, and efficiency of microbial protein synthesis ( < 0.01). Inclusion of BSS increased mean, minimum, and maximum fermentation pH ( < 0.01). Amount of dietary sulfur and BSS inclusion influenced flows of amino acids and fatty acids from fermenters. Influences on fatty acid biohydrogenation and amino acid flows demonstrated an overall suppression of microbial fermentation. Results from this experiment indicate that BSS inclusion at 0.5% of diet DM has detrimental effects on in vitro rumen fermentation in continuous culture.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7204973PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.2527/tas2017.0062DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

dietary sulfur
16
continuous culture
16
bismuth subsalicylate
12
bss inclusion
12
bss
8
inclusion 05%
8
05% diet
8
microbial fermentation
8
fermentation continuous
8
decreased 001
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!