Newborn calves
Phases in growth
Metabolic stuff
VFA and others
Carbs
100

What is true about newborns calves? and their rumen development?

Abomasum is the largest compartment

Poorly developed rumen - no papillae or microbes

Colostrum - passive transfer of antibodies

Rumen development - neonates begin as monogastrics (milk bypasses rumen), Milk is easily digestible (does not need to be fermented), takes time to develop rumen microbiome

100

What is the esophageal groove closure?

Also called reticular groove closure 

Reflex that lets milk bypass the rumen - esophagus -> groove -> abomasum = omasum is underdeveloped at this point

Milk in pharynx stimulates chemoreceptors (afferent signal sent to brain via cranial nerve IX), brain sends efferent signal back through vagus nerve, contracts muscles in reticulum forming a groove, relaxes omasal orifice

100

Metabolic changes calves go through?

Pre ruminant - gluconeogenesis is highly regulated, responsive to insulin

Ruminant - more consistent gluconeogenesis from VFA, less responsive to insulin

With a fully developed rumen - absorbed in rumen (VFA, electrolytes, water), digested/absorbed in SI (protein, lipids, vitamins)

100

Bacteria metabolism aspects?

Protein - can break down AA for energy, transform one AA type into another, can synthesize AA from non-protein nitrogen

Lipids - hydrolyze lipids, biohydrogenate fatty acids, branched chain fatty acids, odd number chain fatty acids

Vitamins - synthesize B vitamins, require cobalt to make vitamin b12

100

What are carbohydrates good for in the diet?

Make up 70-80% of typical ration DM, Supplies 60-70% of net energy, multiple monosaccharide units linked together, 2 major categories (structural CHO and Non-structural CHO)

Structural CHO = cellulose and hemicellulose, lignin and pectin

Non-structural CHO = energy source for the plant, simple sugars (mono and disaccharides), starch (amylose and amylopectin)

200

What is important about colostrum? specific aspects?

No transfer of antibodies through placenta - take ~2 months to develop after birth

Prevents early infectious disease - sepsis, naval infection, joint infections, scours

Absorption decreases rapidly after birth, first 12 hours is key, abomasum not yet secreting HCl and pepsin, anti-trypsin factor in colostrum, Gut open to antibody absorption, supplement if needed, is also an important source of glucose

200

What are the signs of the esophageal groove closure?

What does not effect it?

Does bucket feeding have an effect?

Signs = head butting, tail wagging, enthusiastic to drink - hunger signals

Effects = head position, drinking from teat

Bucket feeding - not as much salivary or gastric secretions, groove closure can be erratic

200

What is the environment that is conducive to growth?

pH 6-7, temp 39, motility (mixing contents and prevents local build up of VFA), substrate and moisture (ingestion of new feed, rumination, drinking and salivation), removal of waste products (absorbed through rumen epithelium, passage to omasum), anerobic (utilized by facultative anaerobes)

200

Protozoa is?

Smaller number than bacteria, decrease faster with rumen turnover, acquire nutrients from numerous sources (bacteria, starch granules, protein, fat, cellulose and hemicellulose)

Population and species are more variable than bacteria, more sensitive to changes in rumen conditions, optimal pH of 6.2-7.0, free-floating in rumen liquid, good indicator of general rumen health

200

Fiber is? types?

Slowly digested structural material, cellulose hemicellulose and lignin, essential for rumen fibrous mat

NDF = cellulose + hemicellulose + lignin (determine dry matter intake)

ADF =  cellulose + lignin (determines digestibility)

300

What is the pre-ruminant phase? when is it?

Milk is primary source of nutrients 

Consume ~20% of body weight/day

Glucose-based metabolism - not VFAs insulin dependent

Little rumen function

Milk replacer - good quality protein, homogenized fat, simple sugars

300

The abomasal secretions are? what stimulates them?`

Stimulated by suckling

Secretions contain rennin and HCl (no pepsin)

Rennin = coagulates casein and fat (curd), remaining liquid = whey, curd undergoes slow digestion

300

The microbial environment in ruminants?

Symbiotic relationship - cows need microbes to break down feed, microbes need cows to provide feed and environment

Different microbes perform different jobs - amylolytic, cellulolytic, methanogens

How do you alter microbial populations - directly adding microbes is not effective long term, more effective to change the environment

300

Fungi is?

Includes yeast, low mass and low number, anaerobic, ferment - starch, cellulose and hemicellulose, some protein

300

Non fiber CHO is?

Starches and sugars

take up less space in rumen 

completely digested by microbes

rapidly fermented 

400

How does intestinal digestion occur in calves?

Chyme from abomasum gradually enter duodenum

pancreatic enzymes and bile - proteases and lipase

Brush border - lactase hydrolyses lactose, not maltase to digest maltose, and no sucrase to digest sucrose

400

What is the transitional phase? When?

3-8 weeks

Increasing amount of milk - 20% or more or body weight/day, introduction to solid feed 

Salivary glands increasing in size and secretions, rumen development requires solid feed

Development of microbiome, establishment of protozoa required repeated direct contact with other animals, metabolism transitions from glucose to VFA

400

Bacteria is?

Largest proportion of microbiome, mostly gram-negative, obligate or facultative anaerobes

There are 1 degree bacteria (directly ferment feed material) and 2 degree bacteria (utilize products produced by 1 degree bacteria 

400

Antibiotics affect the rumen how?

Rumen infections generally do not occur

rumen microbes are susceptible to antibiotics

antimicrobials added to feed - ionophores and tylosin

400

Aspects of starch digestion?

Rumen digestibility - wheat 88-90%, barley 86-88%, corn 75-77%, Oats 88-91%

processing increases digestibility - grinding and rolling, and steam flaking

Sheep and goats can shew whole grain, cattle do not

500

What are the adverse early GI events?

Ruminal acidosis - milk enters rumen, lactose fermented lactic acid, gas formation rumen distention and fluid splashing

Intestinal bacteria growth - poor milk clot formation, excess milk enters duodenum, rapid proliferation of bacteria, scours

500

What is the weaning to adult stage? when?

8 weeks and up

Transition to solid feed only, pepsinogen secreted instead of rennin - wean about 8 weeks

500

Bacteria for CHO metabolism 

Amylolytic - starch fermenters = optimal growth at lower pH, rapid proliferation, short life span

Cellulolytic - fiber fermenters = cellulase (extracellular enzyme), Cellulosome, can also ferment starch, optimal growth at higher pH, longer life span

500

Ionophores help with?

Increases feed efficiency

Helps prevent acute lactic acidosis

helps prevent frothy bloat

helps prevent ketosis in dairy cows

Reduces fecal shedding of M. paratuberculosis

prevents coccidiosis

500

Volatile fatty acids are?

Short chain fatty acids

Acetate - 2 carbon = 70-80%, energy, fatty acid synthesis

Propionate - 3 carbon = 20-30%, gluconeogenesis

Butyrate - 4 carbon = 10%, ketogenesis 

Proportions depend on diets, higher fiber = higher acetate, vs higher concentrate = higher propionate