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A Meta-Analysis of Essential Oils Use for Beef Cattle Feed: Rumen Fermentation, Blood Metabolites, Meat Quality, Performance and, Environmental and Economic Impact

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TLDR
In this paper , the effects of EOs on rumen fermentation, blood metabolites, growth performance and meat quality of beef cattle through a meta-analysis were evaluated. But, the results showed that EOs did not affect pH, color (L* a* and b*), or chemical composition (p > 0.05).
Abstract
The objective of this study was to see how dietary supplementation with essential oils (EOs) affected rumen fermentation, blood metabolites, growth performance and meat quality of beef cattle through a meta-analysis. In addition, a simulation analysis was conducted to evaluate the effects of EOs on the economic and environmental impact of beef production. Data were extracted from 34 peer-reviewed studies and analyzed using random-effects statistical models to assess the weighted mean difference (WMD) between control and EOs treatments. Dietary supplementation of EOs increased (p < 0.01) dry matter intake (WMD = 0.209 kg/d), final body weight (WMD = 12.843 kg), daily weight gain (WMD = 0.087 kg/d), feed efficiency (WMD = 0.004 kg/kg), hot carcass weight (WMD = 5.45 kg), and Longissimus dorsi muscle area (WMD = 3.48 cm2). Lower (p < 0.05) ruminal concentration of ammonia nitrogen (WMD = −1.18 mg/dL), acetate (WMD = −4.37 mol/100 mol) and total protozoa (WMD = −2.17 × 105/mL), and higher concentration of propionate (WMD = 0.878 mol/100 mol, p < 0.001) were observed in response to EOs supplementation. Serum urea concentration (WMD = −1.35 mg/dL, p = 0.026) and haptoglobin (WMD = −39.67 μg/mL, p = 0.031) were lower in cattle supplemented with EOs. In meat, EOs supplementation reduced (p < 0.001) cooking loss (WMD = −61.765 g/kg), shear force (WMD = −0.211 kgf/cm2), and malondialdehyde content (WMD = −0.040 mg/kg), but did not affect pH, color (L* a* and b*), or chemical composition (p > 0.05). Simulation analysis showed that EOs increased economic income by 1.44% and reduced the environmental footprint by 0.83%. In conclusion, dietary supplementation of EOs improves productive performance and rumen fermentation, while increasing the economic profitability and reducing the environmental impact of beef cattle. In addition, supplementation with EOs improves beef tenderness and oxidative stability.

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Essential Oils as a Dietary Additive for Small Ruminants: A Meta-Analysis on Performance, Rumen Parameters, Serum Metabolites, and Product Quality

TL;DR: In this article , the authors evaluated the effects of essential oil supplementation on animal performance, ruminal fermentation, blood metabolites, and meat and milk quality of small ruminants through a meta-analysis.
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Bioprospecting essential oils of exotic species as potential mitigations of ruminant enteric methanogenesis

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors evaluated the effects of three new EOs from plants exotic to the Azores, Pittosporum undulatum (PU), Hedychium gardnerianum (HG), and Cryptomeria japonica (CJ), on biogas production kinetics and in vitro CH4 production.
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Effects of Supplementation with Bee Pollen and Propolis on Growth Performance and Serum Metabolites of Rabbits: A Meta-Analysis

TL;DR: In this paper , the effects of bee pollen (BP) and propolis (PRO) supplementation on rabbits' productive performance and serum metabolites through a meta-analysis were evaluated. And the results suggest that BP or PRO supplementation could be used as natural growth promoters and to improve rabbits' antioxidant status.
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Meta-analysis of flavonoids use into beef and dairy cattle diet: Performance, antioxidant status, ruminal fermentation, meat quality, and milk composition

TL;DR: In this paper , the effects of dietary supplementation with flavonoids (FLAs) on animal performance, diet digestibility, antioxidant status in blood serum, rumen parameters, meat quality, and milk composition in beef and dairy cattle through a meta-analysis.
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Meta-analysis of hydroxycinnamic acids into finishing lambs’ diet: Growth performance, antioxidant status, and meat quality

TL;DR: In this paper , the effects of dietary supplementation with hydroxycinnamic acids (HAs) on productive performance, antioxidant status in blood serum, and meat quality of finishing lambs using meta-analytic methods were evaluated.
References
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What is the role of Fes2 in enhancing meat production?

The provided paper does not mention anything about the role of Fes2 in enhancing meat production. The paper focuses on the effects of dietary supplementation with essential oils on rumen fermentation, blood metabolites, growth performance, meat quality, and the economic and environmental impact of beef production.