Effects of dietary microbial inoculants on beef cattle feedlot growth performance and carcass traits, apparent nutrient digestibility and ruminal characteristics

dc.contributor.committeeChairSarturi, Jhones O.
dc.contributor.committeeMemberJohnson, Bradley J.
dc.contributor.committeeMemberHenry, Darren D.
dc.creatorLopez, Alejandra M.
dc.date.accessioned2023-11-02T16:48:03Z
dc.date.available2023-11-02T16:48:03Z
dc.date.issued2022-12
dc.description.abstractThe effects of the dietary inclusion of a mixture of bacterial direct fed microbials (DFM) on feedlot beef cattle growth performance, carcass characteristics, nutrient digestibility, feeding behavior, and ruminal papillae morphology were evaluated. Crossbred-Angus steers (n = 192; initial BW = 409 kg ± 8 kg) were blocked by BW and randomly assigned into 48 pens (4 steers/pen; 16 pens/treatment) following a randomized complete block design. A steam-flaked corn-based fishing diet was offered ad libitum once daily for 153 d containing the following treatments: 1) Control, in which no DFM was offered (lactose as carrier only, 2 g/animal-daily); 2) Treat-A ( L. animalis DSM33570, P. freudenreichii DSM34127; B. subtilis DSM32324; and B. licheniformis DSM17236, at 1.3; 1.3; 1. 3, and 3.9 × 109 CFU/animal-daily, respectively); and 3) Treat-B, consisting of the same microbial combination, but with doses as follows: 1.3; 1.3; 3.9; and 1.3 × 109 CFU/animal-daily. Data were analyzed using the GLIMMIX procedure of SAS, in which pen was considered the experimental unit with the fixed effect of treatment and the random effect of BW-block, while pre-planned contrasts comparing Control × treat-A or treat-B were performed. Steers offered treat-A increased carcass adjusted ADG (P = 0.03) by 6.7%, gain efficiency (P < 0.01) by 6%, tended (P = 0.07) to increase carcass-adjusted final BW by 15 kg, and hot carcass weight (P = 0.07) by 10 kg, while treat-B did not differ (P ≥ 0.17) from control. Overall DM intake (P = 0.36) and other carcass traits (P ≥ 0.13) were not affected by treatments. Steers offered treat-A tended to increase digestibility of DM (P = 0.07) by 3%, NDF (P = 0.10) and hemicellulose (P = 0.08) by 9% compared to control, while treat-B did not differ (P ≥ 0.10) from control. No treatment × period interactions (P ≥ 0.21) or main effects of treatment (P ≥ 0.12) were observed for feeding behavior. However main effects of phase showed steers ruminated, ate, chewed, and were more active (P ≤ 0.01) during the second behavioral assessment, while more (P < 0.01) time spent ruminating, eating and chewing in minutes per/kg were observed on d 113 vs. 106. Ruminal morphology (P ≥ 0.39) and ruminal ammonia concentration (P = 0.44) were not affected by treatments. Steers offered the DFM treat-A had improved growth performance and it seemed to positively affect carcass quantity, while treat-B did not show similar potential. The DFM combinations did not seem to affect feeding behavior neither ruminal papillae morphology.
dc.format.mimetypeApplication/pdf
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/2346/96554
dc.language.isoen
dc.rights.availabilityAccess is not restricted.
dc.subjectbeef cattle
dc.titleEffects of dietary microbial inoculants on beef cattle feedlot growth performance and carcass traits, apparent nutrient digestibility and ruminal characteristics
dc.typeThesis
thesis.degree.departmentAnimal and Food Science
thesis.degree.disciplineAnimal Science
thesis.degree.grantorTexas Tech University
thesis.degree.levelMasters
thesis.degree.nameMaster of Science

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