The Effect of Direct-Fed Microbials on In-Vitro Rumen Fermentation of Grass or Maize Silage

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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The Effect of Direct-Fed Microbials on In-Vitro Rumen Fermentation of Grass or Maize Silage. / Dhakal, Rajan; Copani, Giuseppe; Cappellozza, Bruno Ieda; Milora, Nina; Hansen, Hanne Helene.

In: Fermentation, Vol. 9, No. 4, 347, 2023.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Dhakal, R, Copani, G, Cappellozza, BI, Milora, N & Hansen, HH 2023, 'The Effect of Direct-Fed Microbials on In-Vitro Rumen Fermentation of Grass or Maize Silage', Fermentation, vol. 9, no. 4, 347. https://doi.org/10.3390/fermentation9040347

APA

Dhakal, R., Copani, G., Cappellozza, B. I., Milora, N., & Hansen, H. H. (2023). The Effect of Direct-Fed Microbials on In-Vitro Rumen Fermentation of Grass or Maize Silage. Fermentation, 9(4), [347]. https://doi.org/10.3390/fermentation9040347

Vancouver

Dhakal R, Copani G, Cappellozza BI, Milora N, Hansen HH. The Effect of Direct-Fed Microbials on In-Vitro Rumen Fermentation of Grass or Maize Silage. Fermentation. 2023;9(4). 347. https://doi.org/10.3390/fermentation9040347

Author

Dhakal, Rajan ; Copani, Giuseppe ; Cappellozza, Bruno Ieda ; Milora, Nina ; Hansen, Hanne Helene. / The Effect of Direct-Fed Microbials on In-Vitro Rumen Fermentation of Grass or Maize Silage. In: Fermentation. 2023 ; Vol. 9, No. 4.

Bibtex

@article{b5a2d7d32aab4436b61cd574af54ffcc,
title = "The Effect of Direct-Fed Microbials on In-Vitro Rumen Fermentation of Grass or Maize Silage",
abstract = "Direct-fed microbial products (DFM) are probiotics that can be used advantageously in ruminant production. The in vitro gas production technique (IVGPT) is a method to simulate rumen fermentation and can be used to measure degradation, gas production, and products of fermentation of such additives. However, inter-laboratory differences have been reported. Therefore, tests using the same material were used to validate laboratory reproducibility. The objective of this study was to assess the effect of adding two DFM formulations on fermentation kinetics, methane (CH4) production, and feed degradation in two different basal feeds while validating a newly established IVGPT laboratory. Six treatments, with three replicates each, were tested simultaneously at the established IVGPT lab at the University of Copenhagen, and the new IVGPT lab at Chr. Hansen Laboratories. Maize silage (MS) and grass silage (GS) were fermented with and without the following DFM: P1: Ligilactobacillus animalis and Propionibacterium freudenreichii (total 1.5 × 107 CFU/mL), P2: P1 with added Bacillus subtilis and B. licheniformis (total 5.9 × 107 CFU/mL). The DFM were anaerobically incubated in rumen fluid and buffer with freeze-dried silage samples for 48 h. Total gas production (TGP: mL at Standard Temperature and Pressure/gram of organic matter), pH, organic matter degradability (dOM), CH4concentration (MC) and yield (MY), and volatile fatty acid (VFA) production and profiles were measured after fermentation. No significant differences between the laboratories were detected for any response variables. The dOM of MS (78.3%) was significantly less than GS (81.4%), regardless of the DFM added (P1 and P2). There were no significant differences between the effects of the DFM within the feed type. MS produced significantly more gas than GS after 48 h, but GS with DFM produced significantly more gas at 3 and 9 h and a similar gas volume at 12 h. Both DFM increased TGP significantly in GS at 48 h. There was no difference in total VFA production. However, GS with and without probiotics produced significantly more propionic acid and less butyric acid than MS with and without probiotics. Adding P2 numerically reduced the total methane yield by 4–6% in both MS and GS. The fermentation duration of 48 h, used to determine maximum potential dOM, may give misleading results. This study showed that it is possible to standardize the methodology to achieve reproducibility of IVGPT results. Furthermore, the results suggest that the P2 DFM may have the potential to reduce CH4 production without affecting organic matter degradation.",
keywords = "curve fitting, direct-fed microbes, fiber degradation, in-vitro fermentation, Lactobacillus, methane (CH), probiotics, ruminants, volatile fatty acid",
author = "Rajan Dhakal and Giuseppe Copani and Cappellozza, {Bruno Ieda} and Nina Milora and Hansen, {Hanne Helene}",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2023 by the authors.",
year = "2023",
doi = "10.3390/fermentation9040347",
language = "English",
volume = "9",
journal = "Fermentation",
issn = "2311-5637",
publisher = "Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The Effect of Direct-Fed Microbials on In-Vitro Rumen Fermentation of Grass or Maize Silage

AU - Dhakal, Rajan

AU - Copani, Giuseppe

AU - Cappellozza, Bruno Ieda

AU - Milora, Nina

AU - Hansen, Hanne Helene

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2023 by the authors.

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - Direct-fed microbial products (DFM) are probiotics that can be used advantageously in ruminant production. The in vitro gas production technique (IVGPT) is a method to simulate rumen fermentation and can be used to measure degradation, gas production, and products of fermentation of such additives. However, inter-laboratory differences have been reported. Therefore, tests using the same material were used to validate laboratory reproducibility. The objective of this study was to assess the effect of adding two DFM formulations on fermentation kinetics, methane (CH4) production, and feed degradation in two different basal feeds while validating a newly established IVGPT laboratory. Six treatments, with three replicates each, were tested simultaneously at the established IVGPT lab at the University of Copenhagen, and the new IVGPT lab at Chr. Hansen Laboratories. Maize silage (MS) and grass silage (GS) were fermented with and without the following DFM: P1: Ligilactobacillus animalis and Propionibacterium freudenreichii (total 1.5 × 107 CFU/mL), P2: P1 with added Bacillus subtilis and B. licheniformis (total 5.9 × 107 CFU/mL). The DFM were anaerobically incubated in rumen fluid and buffer with freeze-dried silage samples for 48 h. Total gas production (TGP: mL at Standard Temperature and Pressure/gram of organic matter), pH, organic matter degradability (dOM), CH4concentration (MC) and yield (MY), and volatile fatty acid (VFA) production and profiles were measured after fermentation. No significant differences between the laboratories were detected for any response variables. The dOM of MS (78.3%) was significantly less than GS (81.4%), regardless of the DFM added (P1 and P2). There were no significant differences between the effects of the DFM within the feed type. MS produced significantly more gas than GS after 48 h, but GS with DFM produced significantly more gas at 3 and 9 h and a similar gas volume at 12 h. Both DFM increased TGP significantly in GS at 48 h. There was no difference in total VFA production. However, GS with and without probiotics produced significantly more propionic acid and less butyric acid than MS with and without probiotics. Adding P2 numerically reduced the total methane yield by 4–6% in both MS and GS. The fermentation duration of 48 h, used to determine maximum potential dOM, may give misleading results. This study showed that it is possible to standardize the methodology to achieve reproducibility of IVGPT results. Furthermore, the results suggest that the P2 DFM may have the potential to reduce CH4 production without affecting organic matter degradation.

AB - Direct-fed microbial products (DFM) are probiotics that can be used advantageously in ruminant production. The in vitro gas production technique (IVGPT) is a method to simulate rumen fermentation and can be used to measure degradation, gas production, and products of fermentation of such additives. However, inter-laboratory differences have been reported. Therefore, tests using the same material were used to validate laboratory reproducibility. The objective of this study was to assess the effect of adding two DFM formulations on fermentation kinetics, methane (CH4) production, and feed degradation in two different basal feeds while validating a newly established IVGPT laboratory. Six treatments, with three replicates each, were tested simultaneously at the established IVGPT lab at the University of Copenhagen, and the new IVGPT lab at Chr. Hansen Laboratories. Maize silage (MS) and grass silage (GS) were fermented with and without the following DFM: P1: Ligilactobacillus animalis and Propionibacterium freudenreichii (total 1.5 × 107 CFU/mL), P2: P1 with added Bacillus subtilis and B. licheniformis (total 5.9 × 107 CFU/mL). The DFM were anaerobically incubated in rumen fluid and buffer with freeze-dried silage samples for 48 h. Total gas production (TGP: mL at Standard Temperature and Pressure/gram of organic matter), pH, organic matter degradability (dOM), CH4concentration (MC) and yield (MY), and volatile fatty acid (VFA) production and profiles were measured after fermentation. No significant differences between the laboratories were detected for any response variables. The dOM of MS (78.3%) was significantly less than GS (81.4%), regardless of the DFM added (P1 and P2). There were no significant differences between the effects of the DFM within the feed type. MS produced significantly more gas than GS after 48 h, but GS with DFM produced significantly more gas at 3 and 9 h and a similar gas volume at 12 h. Both DFM increased TGP significantly in GS at 48 h. There was no difference in total VFA production. However, GS with and without probiotics produced significantly more propionic acid and less butyric acid than MS with and without probiotics. Adding P2 numerically reduced the total methane yield by 4–6% in both MS and GS. The fermentation duration of 48 h, used to determine maximum potential dOM, may give misleading results. This study showed that it is possible to standardize the methodology to achieve reproducibility of IVGPT results. Furthermore, the results suggest that the P2 DFM may have the potential to reduce CH4 production without affecting organic matter degradation.

KW - curve fitting

KW - direct-fed microbes

KW - fiber degradation

KW - in-vitro fermentation

KW - Lactobacillus

KW - methane (CH)

KW - probiotics

KW - ruminants

KW - volatile fatty acid

U2 - 10.3390/fermentation9040347

DO - 10.3390/fermentation9040347

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:85153951045

VL - 9

JO - Fermentation

JF - Fermentation

SN - 2311-5637

IS - 4

M1 - 347

ER -

ID: 346257309