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ARS Home » Midwest Area » Madison, Wisconsin » U.S. Dairy Forage Research Center » Environmentally Integrated Dairy Management Research » Research » Publications at this Location » Publication #384705

Research Project: Improving Nutrient Use Efficiency and Mitigating Nutrient and Pathogen Losses from Dairy Production Systems

Location: Environmentally Integrated Dairy Management Research

Title: Tracing sheep binary C3–C4 diet using stable isotope ratio (d13C)

Author
item DE LIRA, KARINY - Federal Rural University Of Pernambuco
item DUBEUX, JOSE - University Of Florida
item DE ANDRADE LIRA, MARIO - Federal Rural University Of Pernambuco
item CARVALHO, FRANCISCO - Federal Rural University Of Pernambuco
item SANTOS, MERCIA - Federal Rural University Of Pernambuco
item CUNHA, MARCIO - Federal Rural University Of Pernambuco
item MELLO, ALEXANDRE - Federal Rural University Of Pernambuco
item Jaramillo, David
item NETO, JOSE - Federal Rural University Of Pernambuco

Submitted to: Italian Journal of Animal Science
Publication Type: Peer Reviewed Journal
Publication Acceptance Date: 1/20/2021
Publication Date: 2/12/2021
Citation: De Lira, K., Dubeux, J., De Andrade Lira, M., Carvalho, F., Santos, M., Cunha, M., Mello, A., Jaramillo, D.M., Neto, J. 2021. Tracing sheep binary C3–C4 diet using stable isotope ratio (d13C). Italian Journal of Animal Science. https://doi.org/10.1080/1828051X.2021.1881413.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/1828051X.2021.1881413

Interpretive Summary: Stable isotopes are an important tool to assess livestock diet in binary mixtures of C3-C4 forages. However, the use of stable isotopes to trace livestock diet using tropical arboreal legumes has been limited. The objective of this study was to evaluate the use of 13C stable isotopes to identify the proportions of grass (C4) and legume in sheep diet, when consuming various inclusion levels. We evaluated models correlating faecal d13C to diet d13C and inferred which model can better predict the different proportions of grass or legume consumed by sheep. Thirty male lambs (17'±'1.3'kg) were used, and the experiment was set up in a randomised complete block design with body weight being the criteria for blocking. Treatments included various inclusion levels of Sabiá (Mimosa caesalpiniifolia Benth) in signalgrass (Urochloa decumbens Stapf) hay (100:0, 75:25, 50:50, 25:75 e 0:100%). Total faecal production and in vivo digestibility were calculated, as well as d13C of diet and faecal samples. Sabia diet (100%) showed the greatest overall intake, and the lowest faecal production was observed when forages were fed alone, both for signalgrass or sabia hays, with 234 and 245'g dry matter animal-1 d-1. The models used within this study estimated with high accuracy the grass-legume proportions within the diets of sheep (R2=0.97). Our results indicate that using additional coefficients (digestibility, discrimination) did not increase the accuracy of the models, since using only isotopes from faeces was sufficient to predict the contribution of C3 or C4 species in the diet.

Technical Abstract: Stable isotopes are an important tool to assess livestock diet in binary mixtures of C3-C4 forages. However, the use of stable isotopes to trace livestock diet using tropical arboreal legumes has been limited. The objective of this study was to evaluate the use of 13C stable isotopes to identify the proportions of grass (C4) and legume in sheep diet, when consuming various inclusion levels. We evaluated models correlating faecal d13C to diet d13C and inferred which model can better predict the different proportions of grass or legume consumed by sheep. Thirty male lambs (17'±'1.3'kg) were used, and the experiment was set up in a randomised complete block design with body weight being the criteria for blocking. Treatments included various inclusion levels of Sabiá (Mimosa caesalpiniifolia Benth) in signalgrass (Urochloa decumbens Stapf) hay (100:0, 75:25, 50:50, 25:75 e 0:100%). Total faecal production and in vivo digestibility were calculated, as well as d13C of diet and faecal samples. Sabia diet (100%) showed the greatest overall intake, and the lowest faecal production was observed when forages were fed alone, both for signalgrass or sabia hays, with 234 and 245'g dry matter animal-1 d-1. The models used within this study estimated with high accuracy the grass-legume proportions within the diets of sheep (R2=0.97). Our results indicate that using additional coefficients (digestibility, discrimination) did not increase the accuracy of the models, since using only isotopes from faeces was sufficient to predict the contribution of C3 or C4 species in the diet.