نتایج جستجو برای: rumen microorganisms

تعداد نتایج: 50164  

Journal: :Kansas Agricultural Experiment Station Research Reports 1973

2000
R. M. Dixon S. Chanchai

Six mature sheep were fed restricted amounts of either a medium quality roughage or a 1 : 1 mixture of the roughage and barley grain. Disappearance of DM of three roughages (barley straw, oat hay and lucerne hay) from synthetic ®bre bags incubated in the rumen for 6 and 24 h was determined. Also, during intraruminal infusions of NH4C1, synthetic ®bre bags containing each of the three roughages ...

Journal: :تحقیقات دامپزشکی 0
زینب نیک زاد گروه علوم دامی دانشگاه کشاورزی و منابع طبیعی رامین خوزستان، اهواز-ایران مرتضی چاجی گروه علوم دامی دانشگاه کشاورزی و منابع طبیعی رامین خوزستان، اهواز-ایران خلیل میرزاده گروه علوم دامی دانشگاه کشاورزی و منابع طبیعی رامین خوزستان، اهواز-ایران طاهره محمدآبادی گروه علوم دامی دانشگاه کشاورزی و منابع طبیعی رامین خوزستان، اهواز-ایران محسن ساری گروه علوم دامی دانشگاه کشاورزی و منابع طبیعی رامین خوزستان، اهواز-ایران

background: identifying the potential of livestock and forage plants of each region is a way to compensate the lack of forage, and efficient use of edible resources of the country. milk thistle is a medicinal plant which may be used as fodder for native livestock of khuzestan province. objectives: the purpose of this research was to study  the effects of different levels of milk thistle on rume...

2005
R. E. DAVIS I. L. LINDAHL E. J. WARWICK

Slime production by microorganisms in the rumen of cattle and sheep has been advanced as a possible factor in feed-lot bloat by Jacobson and Lindahl (1955), and for frothy legume bloat by Hungate et al. (1955). The slime serves to entrap the fermentation gases and the resulting frothy ingesta blocks the ruminant's gas eructation mechanism. Lindahl et al. (1957) have produced experimental bloat ...

2011
Meng Qi Pan Wang Nicholas O'Toole Perry S. Barboza Emilio Ungerfeld Mary Beth Leigh L. Brent Selinger Greg Butler Adrian Tsang Tim A. McAllister Robert J. Forster

BACKGROUND Herbivores rely on digestive tract lignocellulolytic microorganisms, including bacteria, fungi and protozoa, to derive energy and carbon from plant cell wall polysaccharides. Culture independent metagenomic studies have been used to reveal the genetic content of the bacterial species within gut microbiomes. However, the nature of the genes encoded by eukaryotic protozoa and fungi wit...

Journal: :Applied microbiology 1959
J GUTIERREZ R E DAVIS I L LINDAHL E J WARWICK

Slime production by microorganisms in the rumen of cattle and sheep has been advanced as a possible factor in feed-lot bloat by Jacobson and Lindahl (1955), and for frothy legume bloat by Hungate et al. (1955). The slime serves to entrap the fermentation gases and the resulting frothy ingesta blocks the ruminant's gas eructation mechanism. Lindahl et al. (1957) have produced experimental bloat ...

Journal: :Journal of animal science 1975
H H Li Pun L D Satter

The amount of nitrogen gas (N2) available for microbial protein synthesis via nitrogen fixation in the rumen was estimated. Measurements were made of nitrogen fixation by ruminal ingesta from goats fed low protein rations for a prolonged period of time, and by ingesta from sheep fed high protein rations. Nitrogen fixation by rumen microorganisms incubated for 30 or 180 min in vitro was measured...

Journal: :Journal of Veterinary Diagnostic Investigation 1989

2014
Robert W. Li Juan Gabriel Giarrizzo Sitao Wu Weizhong Li Jennifer M. Duringer A. Morrie Craig

The manufacturing processes of royal demolition explosive (RDX), or hexahydro-1,3,5-trinitro-1,3,5-triazine, have resulted in serious water contamination. As a potential carcinogen, RDX can cause a broad range of harmful effects to humans and animals. The ovine rumen is capable of rapid degradation of nitroaromatic compounds, including RDX. While ruminal RDX-degrading bacteria have been identif...

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