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Estimation of the proportion of non-ammonia-nitrogen reaching the lower gut of the ruminant derived from bacterial and protozoal nitrogen

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TLDR
This method is potentially useful in estimating microbial protein passage to the lower gut in ruminants, and sampling digesta from the omasum rather than the duodenum would simplify the method and possibly increase the reliability of the estimates.
Abstract
1. A method for estimating the proportions of bacterial- and protozoal-N in the total non-ammonia-N reaching the lower gut of the ruminant under steady-state conditions was evaluated. Three trials using two different diets were conducted with a Holstein steer equipped with a rumen cannula and duodenal re-entrant cannulas. 2. An intraruminal primed infusion of (15NH4)2SO4 was administered for 68 h during each trial. Bacteria and protozoa samples were isolated from rumen fluid at approximately 6 h intervals during each infusion period. Total non-ammonia-N was isolated from duodenal digesta samples taken at approximately the same times. All of these samples were analysed for 15N enrichment. A computer program was used to fit equations to the 15N-enrichment curves of bacterial- and protozoal-N. Models of both bacterial- and protozoal-N kinetics consisted of a small pool which equilibrated rapidly with rumen NH3 and a large pool with a fractional turnover rate of 0.045-0.070/h for bacterial-N and 0.056-0.069/h for protozoal-N. 3. Abomasal fluid turnover was estimated by a single injection of polyethylene glycol (molecular weight 4000) into the rumen followed by sampling of rumen fluid and duodenal digesta. 4. Estimates of abomasal fluid turnover, bacterial-N turnover, and protozoal-N turnover were entered into an equation which was adjusted by computer iteration to fit the 15N-enrichment curve of duodenal digesta non-NH3-N generated from each (15NH4)2SO4 infusion period. The computer fit of this equation to the observed results gave estimates of 0:39-0.45 and 0.22-0.41 for the proportion of duodenal non-NH3-N derived from bacterial-N and protozoal-N respectively. 5. This method is potentially useful in estimating microbial protein passage to the lower gut in ruminants. Sampling digesta from the omasum rather than the duodenum would simplify the method and possibly increase the reliability of the estimates.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of diet, climate and physiology on nitrogen isotope abundances in terrestrial foodwebs

TL;DR: Variations in nitrogen isotope ratios in terrestrial foodwebs are described, and alternative models for variation in the enrichment between trophic levels are evaluated, and herbivore species with physiological adaptations to water conservation have higher nitrogen isotopes than water-dependent species.
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Effects of source of protein and carbohydrate on ruminal fermentation and passage of nutrients to the small intestine of lactating cows.

TL;DR: Microbial protein constituted a larger portion of the total N and had a greater influence on the pattern and quantity of amino acids that passed to the duodenum than did protein from fish meal or soybean meal, which escaped ruminal degradation.
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Markers for quantifying microbial protein synthesis in the rumen.

TL;DR: Urinary purine excretion may prove to be a noninvasive method for estimating microbial protein yields in intact dairy cows.
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Determination of reticulo-rumen and whole-stomach digestion in lactating cows by omasal canal or duodenal sampling

TL;DR: The results indicated that the omasal sampling technique provides a promising alternative to the duodenal sampling techniques to investigate forestomach digestion in dairy cows and offers an alternative means to study rumen N metabolism.
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Effect of forage/concentrate ratio and dietary coconut oil level on methane output and performance of finishing beef heifers

TL;DR: Intake, animal performance and methane (CH4) output was investigated using 36 finishing Charolais cross heifers fed ad libitum over an 11-week period and rumen protozoa numbers were significantly lower than expected although coconut oil significantly reduced dry matter intake (DMI), CH4 l/day and LWG on the 0.65:0.35 F/C ratio diet.
References
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TL;DR: In this paper, the Association of Official Analytical Chemists (AOA) published a survey of the state-of-the-art methods and their application in clinical toxicology, including the following:
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Measurement of Size and Turnover Rate of Body Glucose Pool by the Isotope Dilution Method

TL;DR: Glucose uniformly labeled with C14 was administered intravenously in minute amounts to unanesthetized dogs in the postabsorptive state as an initial dose followed by a continuous infusion.
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An eigenfunction expansion method for the analysis of exponential decay curves

TL;DR: In this article, a method is developed for the analysis of data composed of random noise, plus an unknown constant "baseline", plus a sum (or an integral over a continuous distribution) of exponential decay functions.
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