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Y.A. Soltan

Researcher at Alexandria University

Publications -  39
Citations -  580

Y.A. Soltan is an academic researcher from Alexandria University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Dry matter & Rumen. The author has an hindex of 11, co-authored 31 publications receiving 405 citations. Previous affiliations of Y.A. Soltan include University of São Paulo.

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Contribution of condensed tannins and mimosine to the methane mitigation caused by feeding Leucaena leucocephala

TL;DR: Efficiency of Leucaena is demonstrated to mitigate in vivo methane emission of sheep, but it is not revealed which constituent of the plant was primarily responsible for that since no clear efficiency of either tannins or mimosine could be demonstrated.
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Comparative in vitro evaluation of forage legumes (prosopis, acacia, atriplex, and leucaena) on ruminal fermentation and methanogenesis

TL;DR: In this article, two experiments in vitro were conducted to evaluate four Egyptian forage legume browses, i.e., leaves of prosopis (Prosopis juliflora), acacia (Acacia saligna), atriplex (Atriplex halimus), and leucaena (Leucaena leucocephala), in comparison with Tifton (Cynodon sp.) grass hay for their gas production, methanogenic potential, and ruminal fermentation using a semi-automatic system for gas production (first experiment)
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Progressive adaptation of sheep to a microencapsulated blend of essential oils: Ruminal fermentation, methane emission, nutrient digestibility, and microbial protein synthesis

TL;DR: The combination of various active components in essential oils (EO) may be highly effective as a natural dietary supplementation option to manipulate ruminal fermentation and decrease methane (CH4) emissions as mentioned in this paper.
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Comparative effects of Moringa oleifera root bark and monensin supplementations on ruminal fermentation, nutrient digestibility and growth performance of growing lambs

TL;DR: In this paper, the effects of graded levels of Moringa oleifera root bark (MRB) and ionophore antibiotic monensin as dietary feed additives for ruminants' diets were evaluated using the semi-automatic gas production (GP) system.