Methodical considerations when estimating nutrient digestibility in horses using the mobile bag technique.
- Journal Article
Summary
The research article introduces a study that examines the methodological considerations in using the Mobile Bag Technique (MBT) for estimating nutrient digestibility in horses. The aim is to compare the results from the traditional method of collecting and examining total faeces to the results obtained when using the MBT, specifically assessing the nutrient degradation and disappearance of hay.
Study Objectives
In this study, the researchers aimed to:
- Evaluate the usefulness of the Mobile Bag Technique (MBT) for estimating nutrient digestibility in horses.
- Compare the results obtained from the MBT with those of the traditional method of apparent total tract digestibility (ATTD) estimation.
- Test the hypothesis that Dry Matter (DM) degradation estimated by the MBT equals ATTD of the DM.
- Investigate the effects of different bag sizes and the feed-to-surface-area ratio (FSA) on nutrient disappearance.
Methodology
The researchers used five caecum-cannulated horses, feeding them a hay-only diet with 14 days of adaptation followed by four days of total faeces collection. They used three different bag sizes and feed-to-surface-area ratios and administered them at each meal on days 1 and 2 of the collection.
Results
The following are the key findings from the study:
- ATTD of dry matter, organic matter, and certain fibres could be predicted based on their disappearance from the mobile bags. However, mobile bags overestimated ash and crude protein in comparison to the ATTD.
- The time taken for bags to transit through the horse (Transit Time – TT) was 29.2 hours.
- When using a mean retention time of 30 hours to predict effective degradability and degradation, it was found that effective degradability was underestimated, while degradation reflected the ATTD of dry matter.
- The bag size did not have an effect on the dry matter disappearance, however, the feed-to-surface-area ratio should be kept below 20mg/cm, as higher levels might impair degradation kinetics.
Conclusion
The study concludes that the Mobile Bag Technique can be used to estimate the degradability of dry matter, organic matter and fiber as these nutrients resemble the apparent total tract digestibility. However, care should be taken to ensure the feed-to-surface-area ratio is kept below 20mg/cm, as greater values might limit degradation kinetics.
Cite This Article
Publication
Researcher Affiliations
- Department of Animal and Aquacultural Sciences, Norwegian University of Life Sciences, NO-1433 Ås, Norway. Electronic address: nana.wentzel.thorringer@nmbu.no.
- Department of Animal and Aquacultural Sciences, Norwegian University of Life Sciences, NO-1433 Ås, Norway.
MeSH Terms
- Animal Feed / analysis
- Animals
- Diet / veterinary
- Dietary Fiber
- Digestion
- Horses
- Nutrients
Citations
This article has been cited 1 times.- Stang FL, Bjerregaard R, Müller CE, Ergon Å, Halling M, Thorringer NW, Kidane A, Jensen RB. The effect of harvest time of forage on carbohydrate digestion in horses quantified by in vitro and mobile bag techniques. J Anim Sci 2023 Jan 3;101.