AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explored how different levels of dietary fat in concentrate mixes affect various aspects of Hanwoo steers, including growth performance, rumen conditions, digestibility, blood metabolites, and methane emissions.
  • Thirty steers were divided into three groups based on fat concentration in the diet (48g, 74g, and 99g of fat per kg dry matter), with higher fat correlating to a lower total dry matter intake.
  • Key findings included increased propionate levels in rumen fatty acids with higher fat intake, a significant rise in blood cholesterol, and a decrease in methane emissions, indicating that higher dietary fat can lower methane without hindering the growth of the steers.

Article Abstract

This study investigated the effect of different dietary fat levels in concentrate mixes on the growth performance, rumen characteristics, digestibility, blood metabolites, and methane emissions in growing Hanwoo steers. Thirty steers (386 ± 24.6 kg of body weight [BW]; 12 months old), blocked by BW, were randomly assigned to three dietary treatments with varying fat concentrations in concentrate mix (48, 74, and 99 g of ether extract per kg dry matte [DM]). The fat intake of the low-fat treatment represented 4.15% of the total dry matter intake (DMI), while the medium- and high-fat treatments accounted for 5.77% and 7.23% of total DMI, respectively. Concentrate mix DMI decreased with increasing fat level ( < 0.01). The growth rate and digestibility did not significantly differ based on the fat level ( > 0.05). As the fat level increased, propionate in the total ruminal volatile fatty acids increased, and butyrate and acetate-to-propionate decreased ( < 0.01). Cholesterol in blood serum increased significantly with increasing dietary fat levels ( < 0.01). Methane emissions exhibited a linear decrease with increasing fat level ( < 0.05). In conclusion, elevating fat content in the concentrates up to 100 g/kg DM reduced methane emissions without compromising the growth performance of growing Hanwoo steers.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10778547PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani14010139DOI Listing

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