Rumen metabolism and gas formation in sheep fed different fat sources

The aim of the work was to study the effect of various fat sources in sheep nutrition on the indices of rumen digestion and the release of methane and carbon dioxide using the in vivo method. The experiment was conducted in the physiological yard of the L.K. Ernst Federal Research Center for Animal...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: N. V. Bogolyubova, V. A. Devyatkin, R. V. Nekrasov
Format: Article
Language:Russian
Published: Federal Agricultural Research Center of the North-East named N.V. Rudnitsky 2025-04-01
Series:Аграрная наука Евро-Северо-Востока
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.agronauka-sv.ru/jour/article/view/2000
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1839583784424439808
author N. V. Bogolyubova
V. A. Devyatkin
R. V. Nekrasov
author_facet N. V. Bogolyubova
V. A. Devyatkin
R. V. Nekrasov
author_sort N. V. Bogolyubova
collection DOAJ
description The aim of the work was to study the effect of various fat sources in sheep nutrition on the indices of rumen digestion and the release of methane and carbon dioxide using the in vivo method. The experiment was conducted in the physiological yard of the L.K. Ernst Federal Research Center for Animal Husbandry in 2024 on Romanov rams and crossbreeds with Katadin with chronic rumen fistulas using the group-period method. During the control period, animals received the main diet (hay and concentrates), in the I experimental period – in addition to it, palm oil, in the II experimental – sunflower oil, in the III experimental – fat from the larvae of the Hermetia illucens fly at a dosage of 0.5 % of the DM (dry matter) of the diet  (7.5 g per day). Animals received the daily amount of feed in 2 doses. At the end of each period, all animals were examined  for rumen metabolism dynamics and gas emission in vivo. Supplementation of various fat sources in the specified dosage did not have a negative effect on the consumption of basic feed. The use of fly larvae fat in sheep diet contributed to an increase  in the concentration of VFA (volatile fatty acids) by 29 % (p<0.01), a decrease in the level of ammonia nitrogen by 12.91 %. The use of palm and vegetable fats led to a decrease in the concentration of ammonia nitrogen in the rumen by 28.7 % (p<0.05) and 29.5 % (p<0.05) compared to the control, respectively. During the control period, 20.66 l of methane were excreted from the sheep's body, in the I experimental period it was 12.0 % less (18.18 l), in the II experimental period – 6.20 % less (19.38 l), in the III experimental period – 20.33 % less (16.46 l) (p<0.01). Using additional fat sources in ruminant feed may be an effective way to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
format Article
id doaj-art-586c536d8eb848c0bfd969a3e6ecf0a1
institution Matheson Library
issn 2072-9081
2500-1396
language Russian
publishDate 2025-04-01
publisher Federal Agricultural Research Center of the North-East named N.V. Rudnitsky
record_format Article
series Аграрная наука Евро-Северо-Востока
spelling doaj-art-586c536d8eb848c0bfd969a3e6ecf0a12025-08-03T19:52:39ZrusFederal Agricultural Research Center of the North-East named N.V. RudnitskyАграрная наука Евро-Северо-Востока2072-90812500-13962025-04-0126210.30766/2072-9081.2025.26.2.379-387885Rumen metabolism and gas formation in sheep fed different fat sourcesN. V. Bogolyubova0V. A. Devyatkin1R. V. Nekrasov2Federal Research Center for Animal Husbandry named after Academy Member L. K. ErnstFederal Research Center for Animal Husbandry named after Academy Member L. K. ErnstFederal Research Center for Animal Husbandry named after Academy Member L. K. ErnstThe aim of the work was to study the effect of various fat sources in sheep nutrition on the indices of rumen digestion and the release of methane and carbon dioxide using the in vivo method. The experiment was conducted in the physiological yard of the L.K. Ernst Federal Research Center for Animal Husbandry in 2024 on Romanov rams and crossbreeds with Katadin with chronic rumen fistulas using the group-period method. During the control period, animals received the main diet (hay and concentrates), in the I experimental period – in addition to it, palm oil, in the II experimental – sunflower oil, in the III experimental – fat from the larvae of the Hermetia illucens fly at a dosage of 0.5 % of the DM (dry matter) of the diet  (7.5 g per day). Animals received the daily amount of feed in 2 doses. At the end of each period, all animals were examined  for rumen metabolism dynamics and gas emission in vivo. Supplementation of various fat sources in the specified dosage did not have a negative effect on the consumption of basic feed. The use of fly larvae fat in sheep diet contributed to an increase  in the concentration of VFA (volatile fatty acids) by 29 % (p<0.01), a decrease in the level of ammonia nitrogen by 12.91 %. The use of palm and vegetable fats led to a decrease in the concentration of ammonia nitrogen in the rumen by 28.7 % (p<0.05) and 29.5 % (p<0.05) compared to the control, respectively. During the control period, 20.66 l of methane were excreted from the sheep's body, in the I experimental period it was 12.0 % less (18.18 l), in the II experimental period – 6.20 % less (19.38 l), in the III experimental period – 20.33 % less (16.46 l) (p<0.01). Using additional fat sources in ruminant feed may be an effective way to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.https://www.agronauka-sv.ru/jour/article/view/2000methanecarbon dioxiderumen digestiondiet
spellingShingle N. V. Bogolyubova
V. A. Devyatkin
R. V. Nekrasov
Rumen metabolism and gas formation in sheep fed different fat sources
Аграрная наука Евро-Северо-Востока
methane
carbon dioxide
rumen digestion
diet
title Rumen metabolism and gas formation in sheep fed different fat sources
title_full Rumen metabolism and gas formation in sheep fed different fat sources
title_fullStr Rumen metabolism and gas formation in sheep fed different fat sources
title_full_unstemmed Rumen metabolism and gas formation in sheep fed different fat sources
title_short Rumen metabolism and gas formation in sheep fed different fat sources
title_sort rumen metabolism and gas formation in sheep fed different fat sources
topic methane
carbon dioxide
rumen digestion
diet
url https://www.agronauka-sv.ru/jour/article/view/2000
work_keys_str_mv AT nvbogolyubova rumenmetabolismandgasformationinsheepfeddifferentfatsources
AT vadevyatkin rumenmetabolismandgasformationinsheepfeddifferentfatsources
AT rvnekrasov rumenmetabolismandgasformationinsheepfeddifferentfatsources