Agriculture 597 Advanced Animal Nutrition
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Transcript Agriculture 597 Advanced Animal Nutrition
Animal Science 118
Nutrition
Chris Ellason
Nutrient Classes
Water
Carbohydrates (CHO)
Lipids (Fat or Ether Extract)
Protein
Minerals
Vitamins
Water
The most important but most taken for granted
nutrient
Cheapest most abundant nutrient
Animals will die faster due to lack of water than any
other nutrient
65 - 85% of animal weight at birth 45 - 60% at
maturity
Percentage decreases as percent fat increases
Water
Makes up 90 - 95% of blood
3 Locations of water in body tissue
Intracellular
Greatest
water
% of body water (40%)
Extracellular
water
Water in urinary and GI tract
Water Functions
Transportation of nutrients and excretions
Chemical reactions
Body temperature regulation
Lubrication of joints and organs in body
cavity
Water Intake
Water Consumption of Unstressed animals
Swine
- 1.5 to 3 gal/hd/d
Sheep - 1 to 3 gal/hd/d
Cattle - 10 - 14 gal/hd/d
Water Turnover
In ruminants, body water turnover is
about 7 days
Nonruminants have a more rapid turnover
due to less water in the GIT
Slower turnovers are seen in very tolerant
animals such as camels and some sheep
Carbohydrates (CHO)
Made up of C, H and O
Makes structural components of plants
Formed by Photosynthesis
6CO2 + 6H2O + 686kcal = C6H12O6 + 6O2
Generally provide 50 to 75% of dry matter
of food in an animals diet
CHO
Sugars, starches, & cellulose
Simple CHOs, such as Starch, are easily
digested and supply the major source of
energy for swine and poultry
More complex CHO, such as cellulose, are
not easily digested and require a microbial
interaction for effective utilization
Grazing ruminants can make the most
effective use of forages
CHO
2 classes
Fibrous (contains cellulose)
Coastal Hay, alfalfa, cottonseed hulls
Readily available
Milo, Corn, Barley, Wheat
Carbohydrate Classification
Monosaccharides: simple sugars
Hexoses
(6 C)
Glucose
Fructose
Galactose
Mannose
Pentoses
(5 C)
Arabinose
Xylose
Carbohydrate Classification
Disaccharides: 2 sugar molecules linked
together
Sucrose (glucose & fructose)
Maltose (2 glucose)
Lactose (glucose & galactose)
Polysaccharides: Many sugars linked together
Starch: readily digestible
Cellulose: requires bacterial action to break down
Carbohydrate Digestion
Only Monosaccharides can be
absorbed
Nonruminant CHO Digestion
Salivary Amylase
Pancreatic Amylase
Other Carbohydrases - cannot breakdown
Cellulose because of glucose-4--glucoside
linkage
When
the –OH group on the anomeric carbon
is on the same side of the ring as the terminal
–CH2OH
Alpha vs beta linkage
Nonruminant CHO Absorption
Glucose and Galactose are readily
absorbed
Most monosaccharides are converted to
glucose in SI mucosa
Very high percent of absorption occurs in
first two sections of SI
Ruminant CHO Digestion
What’s the difference from nonruminants?
Ruminant CHO Digestion
Very little if any Salivary Amylase
Lower amounts of Pancreatic Amylase
Bacteria in rumen have cellulase
Conversion of CHO to VFAs
75 - 80% of ruminant energy is from VFAs
VFA Metabolism
There are 3 major VFAs
Acetate
Propionate
Butyrate
They occur in concentration as listed
above
VFA Metabolism
How do the relative concentrations of
these change?
As grain increases in the diet, propionate
increases
As fiber increases in the diet, acetate and
butyrate increase
Fat or Lipid Metabolism
Fatty Acids can range from 2 to 24 C in
length
Saturated Fatty Acids
No
double bonds in the chain
Solid at room temperature
Butyric Acid
Stearic Acid
Lipid Metabolism
Unsaturated Fatty Acids
One
or more pairs of C have double bonds
Liquid at room temperature
Number of double bonds denoted in name
Oleic Acid (C18:1)
Linoleic Acid (C18:2)
Lipid Functions
Supply Energy
source of essential fatty acids
carry fat soluble vitamins
cell membrane structure
hormone precursor
Lipid Metabolism
As saturation increases melting point
decreases
Iodine number denotes degree of
unsaturation
Ex
C18:1
Lipid Metabolism
Upper Small Intestine is major site of
absorption
Differences in Ruminant and nonRuminant
Lypolysis
occurs further up the tract in the
ruminant
In nonruminant occurrence is in small
intestine
Fatty acids are neutralized in the rumen
Lipid Metabolism
Ruminants utilize essential fatty acids
much more efficiently than nonruminants
This is important due to extreme
hydrolysis happening in the rumen
Ruminants store 27 to 29% of fat as 18:0
This % is only about 5 in nonruminants
Lipid Metabolism
Essential Fatty Acids
Linoleic
acid (C18:2)
Linolenic acid (C18:3)
Arachidonic acid (C20:4) - Can be synthesized
from linoleic therefore only required if linoleic
is absent
Protein
Structure
Classification
Terminology
Protein Quality
Protein Quality Ruminants
Digestion and Metabolism
Protein Structure
All proteins have one common property
All are made up of chains of amino acids
Essential Amino Acids
22 Amino Acids total
10 are Essential
Pvt Tim Hall
Essential Amino Acids
Phenylalanine
Valine
Threonine
Tryptophan
Isoleucine
Methionine
Histidine
Arginine
Leucine
Lysine
Protein Classification
Simple Proteins: Those yeilding only
amino acids
Albumins:
soluble in water
Globulins: soluble in dilute neutral solutions
salts
Protein Classification
Fibrous Proteins: Constitutes about 30%
of total protein in animal body; connective
tissue
Collagens:
insoluble in water; become
digestible after conversion to gelatin in dilute
acids or bases
Elastins: similar to collagens but cannot be
converted to gelatin
Protein Classification
Conjugated Proteins: those in which
proteins are combined with a nonprotein
radical
Glycoproteins:
contain CHO
Phosphoproteins: contain phosphorus
Lipoproteins: contain lipids
Protein Terminology
True Protein: composed only of amino acids
Nonprotein Nitrogen: not true protein in nature
but contain N and can be converted to protein
by bacterial action
Digestible protein: portion of the crude protein
which an animal can digest
Absorbable protein (Metabolizable Protein):
accounts for the quality and quantity of protein
leaving the rumen
Protein Quality
Biological value: measure of the
relationship of protein retention to protein
absorption
BV (%) = N intake – (Urinary N + Fecal N)
X 100
N intake – Fecal N
Protein efficiency ratio: Protein sources
are compared in terms of gain in animal
weight per gram of protein or N fed
Ruminant Protein Quality
Microbial Protein: Poor quality proteins &
NPN can be upgraded by rumen
fermentation to microbial protein
Bypass Protein: Proteins that bypass
rumen fermentation and go directly into
the omasum
Can
be used more effeciently
Protected Protein
Digestion and Metabolism
Fate of Amino Acid Breakdown
Tissue
protein synthesis
Synthesis of enzymes, hormones
Energy