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María L. Tejido

Researcher at Spanish National Research Council

Publications -  33
Citations -  1006

María L. Tejido is an academic researcher from Spanish National Research Council. The author has contributed to research in topics: Rumen & Hay. The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 33 publications receiving 886 citations. Previous affiliations of María L. Tejido include University of León.

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Influence of direct-fed fibrolytic enzymes on diet digestibility and ruminal activity in sheep fed a grass hay-based diet.

TL;DR: The results indicate that supplementing ENZ directly into the rumen increased the fibrolytic activity and stimulated the growth of cellulolytic bacteria without a prefeeding feed-enzyme interaction.
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Effects of exogenous fibrolytic enzymes on in vitro ruminal fermentation of substrates with different forage:concentrate ratios

TL;DR: In this article, the effects of three fibrolytic enzymes (xylanase from Trichoderma viride (XYL), endoglucanase from Aspergillus niger (ASP) and Trichodorma longibrachiatum (TR)) on the fermentation of three substrates composed of grass hay:
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Microbial protein synthesis, ruminal digestion, microbial populations, and nitrogen balance in sheep fed diets varying in forage-to-concentrate ratio and type of forage.

TL;DR: The results indicate that concentrates with low cereal content can be included in the diet of sheep up to 70% of the diet without detrimental effects on ruminal activity, microbial synthesis efficiency, and N losses.
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Influence of exogenous fibrolytic enzymes and fumarate on methane production, microbial growth and fermentation in Rusitec fermenters

TL;DR: Combining FE and FUM as feed additives under the conditions of the present experiment did not further improve rumen fermentation, compared to FE alone and the lack of effects of FUM and the absence of differences between FE and MIX on most of the measured variables would indicate that beneficial effects found in MIX fermenters were mainly due to the action of FE.
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Effects of exogenous cellulase supplementation on microbial growth and ruminal fermentation of a high-forage diet in Rusitec fermenters.

TL;DR: The results show that the TRI and MIX treatments enhanced in vitro fermentation by increasing substrate fiber degradation, VFA production, and ruminal microbial growth.