Protein metabolism, feed energy partitioning, behavior patterns and plasma cortisol in Nellore steers with high and low residual feed intake.

The objective was to evaluate protein turnover, nitrogen balance, feed energy partitioning, behavior patterns and plasma cortisol in Nellore (B. indicus) cattle with high and low residual feed intake (RFI = actual minus expected dry matter intake). Seventy-two Nellore steers (16 to 21 months-old, 334±19 kg initial body weight) were fed a feedlot diet for 70 days ad libitum. Daily dry matter intake (DMI) and average daily gain (ADG) were recorded individually and RFI was calculated. The 12 steers of lowest (Low-RFI, most efficient) RFI and the 12 ones of highest RFI (High-RFI, least efficient) were evaluated with respect to their behavior patterns and plasma cortisol concentration. Urine was collected for determination of daily 3-methylhistidine excretion (3MH) and myofibrillar protein breakdown rates. Urinary, gaseous and fecal energy losses were determined as well as the N retention and excretion. High-RFI steers tended to have shorter lying and idle periods and greater feeding time and plasma cortisol levels than low-RFI cattle. No RFI effects were seen for urine 3MH excretion and for rates of protein degradation and synthesis. No effects of efficiency class were observed for N excretion or N retention. No RFI effects were observed for dry matter digestibility, digestible energy (DE) and metabolizable energy (ME) content and DE/ME ratio. Methane energy losses were lower for low- compared with high-RFI steers. Protein turnover seems not to affect feed efficiency in Nellore steers. Improved RFI in Nellore steers is probably associated with lower degrees of activity and responsiveness to stress and lower losses of dietary energy as methane.

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Autores principales: GOMES, R. da C., SAINZ, R. D., LEME, P. R.
Otros Autores: RODRIGO DA COSTA GOMES, CNPGC; Roberto Daniel Sainz, Faculdade de Zootecnia e Engenharia de Alimentos, Universidade de São Paulo.; Paulo Roberto Leme, Department of Animal Science, University of California.
Formato: Separatas biblioteca
Idioma:English
eng
Publicado: 2013-03-07
Materias:Bovino de corte., Nutrição Animal.,
Acceso en línea:http://www.alice.cnptia.embrapa.br/alice/handle/doc/952472
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spelling dig-alice-doc-9524722017-08-15T23:52:40Z Protein metabolism, feed energy partitioning, behavior patterns and plasma cortisol in Nellore steers with high and low residual feed intake. GOMES, R. da C. SAINZ, R. D. LEME, P. R. RODRIGO DA COSTA GOMES, CNPGC; Roberto Daniel Sainz, Faculdade de Zootecnia e Engenharia de Alimentos, Universidade de São Paulo.; Paulo Roberto Leme, Department of Animal Science, University of California. Bovino de corte. Nutrição Animal. The objective was to evaluate protein turnover, nitrogen balance, feed energy partitioning, behavior patterns and plasma cortisol in Nellore (B. indicus) cattle with high and low residual feed intake (RFI = actual minus expected dry matter intake). Seventy-two Nellore steers (16 to 21 months-old, 334±19 kg initial body weight) were fed a feedlot diet for 70 days ad libitum. Daily dry matter intake (DMI) and average daily gain (ADG) were recorded individually and RFI was calculated. The 12 steers of lowest (Low-RFI, most efficient) RFI and the 12 ones of highest RFI (High-RFI, least efficient) were evaluated with respect to their behavior patterns and plasma cortisol concentration. Urine was collected for determination of daily 3-methylhistidine excretion (3MH) and myofibrillar protein breakdown rates. Urinary, gaseous and fecal energy losses were determined as well as the N retention and excretion. High-RFI steers tended to have shorter lying and idle periods and greater feeding time and plasma cortisol levels than low-RFI cattle. No RFI effects were seen for urine 3MH excretion and for rates of protein degradation and synthesis. No effects of efficiency class were observed for N excretion or N retention. No RFI effects were observed for dry matter digestibility, digestible energy (DE) and metabolizable energy (ME) content and DE/ME ratio. Methane energy losses were lower for low- compared with high-RFI steers. Protein turnover seems not to affect feed efficiency in Nellore steers. Improved RFI in Nellore steers is probably associated with lower degrees of activity and responsiveness to stress and lower losses of dietary energy as methane. 2013-03-07T11:11:11Z 2013-03-07T11:11:11Z 2013-03-07 2013 2013-03-07T11:11:11Z Separatas Revista Brasileira de Zootecnia, v.42, n.1, p.44-50, 2013. http://www.alice.cnptia.embrapa.br/alice/handle/doc/952472 en eng openAccess
institution EMBRAPA
collection DSpace
country Brasil
countrycode BR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-alice
tag biblioteca
region America del Sur
libraryname Sistema de bibliotecas de EMBRAPA
language English
eng
topic Bovino de corte.
Nutrição Animal.
Bovino de corte.
Nutrição Animal.
spellingShingle Bovino de corte.
Nutrição Animal.
Bovino de corte.
Nutrição Animal.
GOMES, R. da C.
SAINZ, R. D.
LEME, P. R.
Protein metabolism, feed energy partitioning, behavior patterns and plasma cortisol in Nellore steers with high and low residual feed intake.
description The objective was to evaluate protein turnover, nitrogen balance, feed energy partitioning, behavior patterns and plasma cortisol in Nellore (B. indicus) cattle with high and low residual feed intake (RFI = actual minus expected dry matter intake). Seventy-two Nellore steers (16 to 21 months-old, 334±19 kg initial body weight) were fed a feedlot diet for 70 days ad libitum. Daily dry matter intake (DMI) and average daily gain (ADG) were recorded individually and RFI was calculated. The 12 steers of lowest (Low-RFI, most efficient) RFI and the 12 ones of highest RFI (High-RFI, least efficient) were evaluated with respect to their behavior patterns and plasma cortisol concentration. Urine was collected for determination of daily 3-methylhistidine excretion (3MH) and myofibrillar protein breakdown rates. Urinary, gaseous and fecal energy losses were determined as well as the N retention and excretion. High-RFI steers tended to have shorter lying and idle periods and greater feeding time and plasma cortisol levels than low-RFI cattle. No RFI effects were seen for urine 3MH excretion and for rates of protein degradation and synthesis. No effects of efficiency class were observed for N excretion or N retention. No RFI effects were observed for dry matter digestibility, digestible energy (DE) and metabolizable energy (ME) content and DE/ME ratio. Methane energy losses were lower for low- compared with high-RFI steers. Protein turnover seems not to affect feed efficiency in Nellore steers. Improved RFI in Nellore steers is probably associated with lower degrees of activity and responsiveness to stress and lower losses of dietary energy as methane.
author2 RODRIGO DA COSTA GOMES, CNPGC; Roberto Daniel Sainz, Faculdade de Zootecnia e Engenharia de Alimentos, Universidade de São Paulo.; Paulo Roberto Leme, Department of Animal Science, University of California.
author_facet RODRIGO DA COSTA GOMES, CNPGC; Roberto Daniel Sainz, Faculdade de Zootecnia e Engenharia de Alimentos, Universidade de São Paulo.; Paulo Roberto Leme, Department of Animal Science, University of California.
GOMES, R. da C.
SAINZ, R. D.
LEME, P. R.
format Separatas
topic_facet Bovino de corte.
Nutrição Animal.
author GOMES, R. da C.
SAINZ, R. D.
LEME, P. R.
author_sort GOMES, R. da C.
title Protein metabolism, feed energy partitioning, behavior patterns and plasma cortisol in Nellore steers with high and low residual feed intake.
title_short Protein metabolism, feed energy partitioning, behavior patterns and plasma cortisol in Nellore steers with high and low residual feed intake.
title_full Protein metabolism, feed energy partitioning, behavior patterns and plasma cortisol in Nellore steers with high and low residual feed intake.
title_fullStr Protein metabolism, feed energy partitioning, behavior patterns and plasma cortisol in Nellore steers with high and low residual feed intake.
title_full_unstemmed Protein metabolism, feed energy partitioning, behavior patterns and plasma cortisol in Nellore steers with high and low residual feed intake.
title_sort protein metabolism, feed energy partitioning, behavior patterns and plasma cortisol in nellore steers with high and low residual feed intake.
publishDate 2013-03-07
url http://www.alice.cnptia.embrapa.br/alice/handle/doc/952472
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AT sainzrd proteinmetabolismfeedenergypartitioningbehaviorpatternsandplasmacortisolinnelloresteerswithhighandlowresidualfeedintake
AT lemepr proteinmetabolismfeedenergypartitioningbehaviorpatternsandplasmacortisolinnelloresteerswithhighandlowresidualfeedintake
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