The effect of n-alkane faecal recovery on the accuracy of diet composition estimates, when increasing the number of diet components, was studied. Seven dietary treatments, composed of different proportions of herbaceous (Lolium perenne and Trifolium repens) and woody species (Erica umbellata, Erica cinerea, Calluna vulgaris, Erica arborea and Ulex gallii) were offered to 28 goats housed in metabolism crates. Diet composition was estimated from alkane concentrations in diet and faeces, with and without correction for incomplete faecal recoveries, using least-squares procedures and was compared with the known diet proportions. There were no significant differences between measured proportions of dietary components and those estimated with alkanes when applying the faecal recovery corrections. In contrast, the proportions calculated without faecal recovery correction differed significantly (p < 0.05) from the actual proportions, overestimating feeds with higher content of long-chain n-alkanes. The diet composition affected significantly the faecal recovery of alkanes if there were significant differences on in vivo digestibility. The n-alkane faecal recoveries decreased as the diet digestibility increased. The results obtained show that the application of the alkane methodology for grazing animals should be preceded by calculation of the actual alkane faecal recoveries for each type of vegetation community and experimental conditions.
The influence of breed and mh-genotype on carcass conformation, meat physico-chemical characteristics and the fatty acid profile of muscle were studied. Samples from 16 yearling bulls from "Asturiana de los Valles" (AV, n=12) and "Asturiana de la Montaña" (AM, n=4) were collected. AV animals were classified into three groups according to the presence of the gene causing double-muscling (AV double-muscled (mh/mh), n=4; AV heterozygous (mh/+), n=4; AV normal (+/+), n=4). Double-muscled animals displayed better carcass traits, lower total fat (comprised of subcutaneous (SC), intermuscular (IT) and intramuscular (IM) deposits), higher lean, moisture and drip loss, and lighter meat than AV normal animals. Heterozygous animals showed intermediate characteristics. AM animals, being a more rustic and smaller breed, showed lower conformation, higher total fat (SC, IT and IM), lower moisture and darker meat. According to the intramuscular fatty acid profile, mh/mh animals showed a lower proportion of SFA and MUFA, and a higher proportion of PUFA with an equal proportion of CLA in total fatty acid content. The P/S ratio increased with increasing number of mh alleles (or double-muscling character), while no differences between animal groups were found for the n-6/n-3 ratio.
The present study aimed to evaluate the reliability of the n-alkane technique for estimating herbage intake in beef cattle receiving two different feeding levels (low and high) and to test the effect of different faeces sampling procedures (total faeces samples or rectal grab samples at 8 h intervals) on the n-alkane faecal recoveries and hence on intake estimates. Two consecutive experiments were performed with 11 non-lactating beef cows of "Asturiana de los Valles" breed, fed with lucerne hay at two feeding levels: 1.0 or 1.7 kg DM/100 kg body weight (BW). Animals received a daily dose of paper pellets containing C 24 , C 32 and C 36 n-alkanes as external markers with the purpose of using different n-alkane pairs of adjacent chain length (C 23 /C 24 , C 25 /C 24 , C 31 /C 32 , C 33 /C 32 , C 35 /C 36 ) for intake calculations. A 5-day equilibrium period was sufficient for external marker concentrations and n-alkane pair ratios to reach steady state in faeces. There was no effect of different sampling times (every 8 h) on the faecal excretion of n-alkane pairs C 31 /C 32 and C 33 /C 32 . Grab samples obtained at the time of dosing (0830 h) gave the best estimate of n-alkane pair ratios in total faeces collection. There was a general trend of increasing n-alkane faecal recoveries with increased chain length, although n-alkanes C 30 , C 31 and C 33 showed lower faecal recoveries than expected. n-Alkane recoveries were in general lower at the low feeding level, where an increase in individual variability of natural n-alkane recoveries was observed. At both feeding levels, the n-alkane pairs C 23 /C 24 and C 35 /C 36 gave accurate estimates of the treatment average intake, although the natural n-alkane (C 23 or C 35 ) faecal recoveries showed high individual variability, which could be in part due to analytical bias caused by their extremely low concentration in the diet and faeces. However, the n-alkane pairs C 31 /C 32 and C 33 /C 32 gave the greatest deviations of intake estimates, due to the high discrepancy between the faecal recoveries of natural and dosed n-alkanes. These results demonstrate that in beef cattle, feeding level may have some influence on the relative faecal recoveries of the n-alkane pair used for intake calculations. This effect, together with the high individual variability of n-alkane recoveries, especially under low feeding level, may produce significant deviations of the individual intake estimates.
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