Title of article :
Digestion, rumen fermentation and circulating concentrations of insulin, growth hormone and IGF-1 in steers fed diets based on different proportions of maize silage and grass silage
Abstract :
Replacing grass silage with maize silage results in a fundamental change in the ratio of structural to non-structural
carbohydrates with commensurate changes in rumen fermentation patterns and nutrient utilisation. This study investigated
the effects of feeding four forage mixtures, namely grass silage (G); 67 g/100 g grass silage133 g/100 g maize silage (GGM);
67 g/100 g maize silage133/100 g grass silage (MMG); maize silage (M) to four ruminally and duodenally canulated Holstein
Friesian steers. All diets were formulated to be isonitrogenous (22.4 g N/kg DM) using a concentrate mixture. Dietary dry matter
(DM) and organic matter (OM) digestibility increased with ascending maize silage inclusion (P,0.1) whereas starch and neutral
detergent fibre digestibility declined (P,0.05). Ratio of non-glucogenic to glucogenic precursors in the rumen fluid increased with
maize silage inclusion (P,0.01) with a commensurate reduction in rumen pH (P,0.05). Mean circulating concentrations of insulin
were greatest and similar in diets MMG and GGM, lower in diet M and lowest in diet G (P,0.01). There were no effects of diet
on the mean circulating concentration of growth hormone (GH), or the frequency, amplitude and duration of GH pulses, or the
mean circulating concentrations of IGF-1. Increasing levels of DM, OM and starch intakes with the substitution of grass silage with
maize silage affected overall digestion, nutrient partitioning and subsequent circulating concentrations of insulin.
Keywords :
grass , Silage , VFA , Maize , Insulin