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Journal of Dairy Science Vol. 67 No. 7 1439-1444
© 1984 by American Dairy Science Association ®
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Rumen Fermentation In Vitro as Influenced by Long Chain Fatty Acids1

William Chalupa, Bonnie Rickabaugh, D. S. Kronfeld and David Sklan

School of Veterinary Medicine2, University of Pennsylvania, Kennett Square, PA 19348 and Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Rehovot, Israel 76-100

ABSTRACT

Responses of rumen microbes to fatty acids were evaluated by production of total volatile fatty acid and ratio of acetate to propionate. Fermentations were under carbon dioxide for 20 h in 50-ml Erlenmeyer flasks in a Dubnoff metabolic shaking incubator. Flasks contained 20 ml medium, 1 ml reducing solution, 750 mg substrate (450 mg hay plus 300 mg grain), and varying amounts of longchain fatty acids supplied as free acids, as calcium salts, or as triglycerides. They were inoculated with 5 ml rumen fluid obtained from a cow fed 3.6 kg grass hay, 2.3 kg grain, and .2 kg tallow daily. Volatile fatty acid production was decreased by long-chain fatty acids that contained less than 18 carbon atoms and by unsaturated long-chain fatty acids with 18 carbon atoms. Lauric acid decreased volatile fatty acid production by 69% and induced unusual acetate/propionate ratio (40:1). Stearic acid, however, did not affect volatile fatty acid production or acetate/propionate ratio. Within two series of long chain fatty acids (myristic, palmitic, stearic, arachidic; stearic, oleic, linolenic), melting point accounted for 93 to 95% of the variation of volatile fatty acid production and acetate/propionate. As calcium salts, long chain fatty acids caused small changes of fermentation. Our data support the proposition that hard fats and calcium salts of long-chain fatty acids do not interfere with ruminal fermentation.


FOOTNOTES

1 This research was supported by Grant No. US-310-80 from BARD—The United States-Israel Binarational Agricultural Research and Development Fund.

2 Nutrition Section, Department of Clinical Studies at New Bolton Center.




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