Cattle and sheep develop preference for drinking water containing grape seed tannin*

Ingestion of small amounts of some types of condensed tannins (CTs) by ruminant livestock can provide nutritional, environmental and economic benefits. However, practical methods are needed to make these tannins more available to ruminant livestock. Results from previous trials with crude quebracho...

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Main Authors: S.L. Kronberg, C.S. Schauer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2013-01-01
Series:Animal
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1751731113001262
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spelling doaj-e9cbb77c96a04b2bb6df9a88ce9b5c0c2021-06-06T04:49:04ZengElsevierAnimal1751-73112013-01-0171017141720Cattle and sheep develop preference for drinking water containing grape seed tannin*S.L. Kronberg0C.S. Schauer1United States Department of Agriculture, Agriculture Research Service, Northern Great Plains Research Laboratory, PO Box 459, Mandan, North Dakota 58554, USAHettinger Research Extension Center, North Dakota State University, Hettinger, North Dakota 58639, USAIngestion of small amounts of some types of condensed tannins (CTs) by ruminant livestock can provide nutritional, environmental and economic benefits. However, practical methods are needed to make these tannins more available to ruminant livestock. Results from previous trials with crude quebracho and black wattle tannin indicated that cattle and/or sheep would not preferentially drink water containing these tannins. Therefore, we conducted preference trials to determine if cattle and sheep would learn to prefer water containing purified grape seed tannin (GST) that provided up to 2% of their daily dry matter (DM) intake. After gradual exposure to increasing amounts of this tannin in water during a pre-trial period, five adult ewes and five yearling heifers fed lucerne (Medicago sativa) pellets (19% CP) were offered water and several concentrations of GST solutions for either 15 (sheep trial) or 20 days (cattle trial). We measured intake of all liquids daily. Concentrations of blood urea were also measured for heifers when they drank only tannin solutions or water. Both sheep and cattle developed preferences for water with GST in it over water alone (P < 0.01) although this preference appeared earlier in the trial for sheep than for cattle. For the sheep, mean daily intake of water alone and all tannin solutions (in total) was 0.6 and 6.1 l, respectively. For the cattle, mean daily intake of water and all tannin solutions in total was 21.8 and 20.6 l, respectively, in the first half of the trial and 10.8 and 26.1 l, respectively, in the second half of the trial. Compared with the other tannin solutions, both sheep and cattle drank more of the solution with the highest tannin concentration (2% of daily DM intake as GST) than of water on more trial days (P < 0.05). Ingestion of water with the highest concentration of GST reduced blood plasma urea concentration in the cattle by 9% to 14% (P ⩽ 0.10) compared with ingestion of water alone. Results from the trials suggest that providing grape seed and perhaps other CTs via drinking water may be a practical way to introduce CTs into sheep and cattle diets.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1751731113001262condensed tanninnitrogenpalatabilitypollutionruminantsurea
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author S.L. Kronberg
C.S. Schauer
spellingShingle S.L. Kronberg
C.S. Schauer
Cattle and sheep develop preference for drinking water containing grape seed tannin*
Animal
condensed tannin
nitrogen
palatability
pollution
ruminants
urea
author_facet S.L. Kronberg
C.S. Schauer
author_sort S.L. Kronberg
title Cattle and sheep develop preference for drinking water containing grape seed tannin*
title_short Cattle and sheep develop preference for drinking water containing grape seed tannin*
title_full Cattle and sheep develop preference for drinking water containing grape seed tannin*
title_fullStr Cattle and sheep develop preference for drinking water containing grape seed tannin*
title_full_unstemmed Cattle and sheep develop preference for drinking water containing grape seed tannin*
title_sort cattle and sheep develop preference for drinking water containing grape seed tannin*
publisher Elsevier
series Animal
issn 1751-7311
publishDate 2013-01-01
description Ingestion of small amounts of some types of condensed tannins (CTs) by ruminant livestock can provide nutritional, environmental and economic benefits. However, practical methods are needed to make these tannins more available to ruminant livestock. Results from previous trials with crude quebracho and black wattle tannin indicated that cattle and/or sheep would not preferentially drink water containing these tannins. Therefore, we conducted preference trials to determine if cattle and sheep would learn to prefer water containing purified grape seed tannin (GST) that provided up to 2% of their daily dry matter (DM) intake. After gradual exposure to increasing amounts of this tannin in water during a pre-trial period, five adult ewes and five yearling heifers fed lucerne (Medicago sativa) pellets (19% CP) were offered water and several concentrations of GST solutions for either 15 (sheep trial) or 20 days (cattle trial). We measured intake of all liquids daily. Concentrations of blood urea were also measured for heifers when they drank only tannin solutions or water. Both sheep and cattle developed preferences for water with GST in it over water alone (P < 0.01) although this preference appeared earlier in the trial for sheep than for cattle. For the sheep, mean daily intake of water alone and all tannin solutions (in total) was 0.6 and 6.1 l, respectively. For the cattle, mean daily intake of water and all tannin solutions in total was 21.8 and 20.6 l, respectively, in the first half of the trial and 10.8 and 26.1 l, respectively, in the second half of the trial. Compared with the other tannin solutions, both sheep and cattle drank more of the solution with the highest tannin concentration (2% of daily DM intake as GST) than of water on more trial days (P < 0.05). Ingestion of water with the highest concentration of GST reduced blood plasma urea concentration in the cattle by 9% to 14% (P ⩽ 0.10) compared with ingestion of water alone. Results from the trials suggest that providing grape seed and perhaps other CTs via drinking water may be a practical way to introduce CTs into sheep and cattle diets.
topic condensed tannin
nitrogen
palatability
pollution
ruminants
urea
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1751731113001262
work_keys_str_mv AT slkronberg cattleandsheepdeveloppreferencefordrinkingwatercontaininggrapeseedtannin
AT csschauer cattleandsheepdeveloppreferencefordrinkingwatercontaininggrapeseedtannin
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