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Journal ArticleDOI

A net carbohydrate and protein system for evaluating cattle diets: II. Carbohydrate and protein availability.

TLDR
The Cornell Net Carbohydrate and Protein System has a submodel that predicts rates of feedstuff degradation in the rumen, the passage of undegraded feed to the lower gut, and the amount of ME and protein that is available to the animal.
Abstract
The Cornell Net Carbohydrate and Protein System (CNCPS) has a submodel that predicts rates of feedstuff degradation in the rumen, the passage of undegraded feed to the lower gut, and the amount of ME and protein that is available to the animal. In the CNCPS, structural carbohydrate (SC) and nonstructural carbohydrate (NSC) are estimated from sequential NDF analyses of the feed. Data from the literature are used to predict fractional rates of SC and NSC degradation. Crude protein is partitioned into five fractions. Fraction A is NPN, which is trichloroacetic (TCA) acid-soluble N. Unavailable or protein bound to cell wall (Fraction C) is derived from acid detergent insoluble nitrogen (ADIP), and slowly degraded true protein (Fraction B3) is neutral detergent insoluble nitrogen (NDIP) minus Fraction C. Rapidly degraded true protein (Fraction B1) is TCA-precipitable protein from the buffer-soluble protein minus NPN. True protein with an intermediate degradation rate (Fraction B2) is the remaining N. Protein degradation rates are estimated by an in vitro procedure that uses Streptomyces griseus protease, and a curve-peeling technique is used to identify rates for each fraction. The amount of carbohydrate or N that is digested in the rumen is determined by the relative rates of degradation and passage. Ruminal passage rates are a function of DMI, particle size, bulk density, and the type of feed that is consumed (e.g., forage vs cereal grain).

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Influence of maturity on alfalfa hay nutritional fractions and indigestible fiber content.

TL;DR: This study focused on changes in fibrous and protein fractions, changes in fiber digestibility and amount of indigestible neutral detergent fiber (NDF) as a consequence of increased maturity in alfalfa.
Journal ArticleDOI

Comparação de Indicadores e Metodologia de Coleta para Estimativas de Produção Fecal e Fluxo de Digesta em Bovinos

TL;DR: There was not difference in all the studied variables, demonstrating the suggested alternative methodology as soon as can be used with safety for the estimates of fecal production and DM flows in the abomasum and ileum.
Journal ArticleDOI

Intake and digestibility in cattle under grazing supplemented with nitrogenous compounds during dry season

TL;DR: In this paper, the effects of supplementation with nitrogenous compounds on intake and digestibility in cattle under grazing during dry season were evaluated, and linear-response-plateau relationships were observed between intake estimates and diet crude protein levels.
Journal ArticleDOI

Whole-herd optimization with the Cornell Net Carbohydrate and Protein System. I. Predicting feed biological values for diet optimization with linear programming.

TL;DR: This linear optimizer can be used to accurately formulate least-cost diets with the CNCPS model and typically obtained a solution in less than six iterations that met the requirements with nearly 100% accuracy.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of Supplementation of a Grass Silage and Barley Diet with Urea, Rapeseed Meal and Heat-moisture-treated Rapeseed Cake on Omasal Digesta Flow and Milk Production in Lactating Dairy Cows

TL;DR: Four multiparous dairy cows, fitted with rumen and duodenal cannulas, were fed grass silage and one of four concentrates of barley, barley+urea (BU), barley+solvent-extracted rapeseed meal (BRM) or barley+heat-moisture-treated rapeseed cake (BRC), and diets had no effect on rumen microbial protein synthesis.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Methods for dietary fiber, neutral detergent fiber, and nonstarch polysaccharides in relation to animal nutrition.

TL;DR: In addition to NDF, new improved methods for total dietary fiber and nonstarch polysaccharides including pectin and beta-glucans now are available and are also of interest in rumen fermentation.
Journal ArticleDOI

A net carbohydrate and protein system for evaluating cattle diets: I. Ruminal fermentation.

TL;DR: The Cornell Net Carbohydrate and Protein System (CNCPS) has a kinetic submodel that predicts ruminal fermentation and the protein-sparing effect of ionophores is accommodated by decreasing the rate of peptide uptake by 34%.
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