“…Ruminal degradation of fresh forage differs from that of conserved 'dead' plant material (Kingston-Smith & Theodorou, 2000;Joblin et al, 2002), with very little known about how these differences affect the microorganisms involved in forage degradation (Cheng et al, 1980(Cheng et al, , 1981. As uncultivated novel taxa comprise a significant proportion of the bacterial species in feed-associated ruminal biofilms (Tajima et al, 1999;Koike et al, 2003b;Larue et al, 2005) and associated with plant material (Marilley & Aragno, 1999;Sessitsch et al, 2002;Dent et al, 2004;Jiao et al, 2006) it is clear that the use of noncultivation-based techniques is important for the study of ruminal bacteria colonizing fresh forage.…”