Characterization of dairy cow rumen bacterial and archaeal communities associated with grass silage and maize silage based diets.

The objective of the present study was to characterize the rumen bacterial and archaeal communities in dairy cows fed different ratios of maize silage (MS) and grass silage (GS), and place the findings in the context of ruminal fermentation as well as previously reported methane (CH4) emissions. Rum...

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Main Authors: Jueeli D Vaidya, Sanne van Gastelen, Hauke Smidt, Caroline M Plugge, Joan E Edwards
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2020-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0229887
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spelling doaj-f54b4b00afb24d3f97a1e352480933252021-03-03T21:35:39ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032020-01-01153e022988710.1371/journal.pone.0229887Characterization of dairy cow rumen bacterial and archaeal communities associated with grass silage and maize silage based diets.Jueeli D VaidyaSanne van GastelenHauke SmidtCaroline M PluggeJoan E EdwardsThe objective of the present study was to characterize the rumen bacterial and archaeal communities in dairy cows fed different ratios of maize silage (MS) and grass silage (GS), and place the findings in the context of ruminal fermentation as well as previously reported methane (CH4) emissions. Rumen fluid from 12 rumen cannulated dairy cows was collected after 10 and 17 days of feeding one of four diets, all of which had the same roughage to concentrate ratio of 80:20 based on dry matter (DM). Roughage in the four diets (GS100, GS0, GS67, GS33) consisted of either 1000 g/kg DM GS (GS100), 1000 g/kg DM MS (GS0), or a mixture of both silages in different proportions [667 g/kg DM GS and 333 g/kg DM MS (GS67); 333 g/kg DM GS and 677 g/kg DM MS (GS33)]. Total volatile fatty acid (VFA) concentrations and the molar proportions of the ruminal VFA were not affected by diet. Only the molar proportion of isovalerate was affected by time, being lower on day 17 than on day 10. Bacterial and archaeal concentrations were not affected by diet but increased from day 10 to day 17. The bacterial community composition was affected by diet, time and diet × time, whereas the archaeal community composition was only affected by diet. Several bacterial and archaeal genus level groups were associated with diet, but not with time. Analysis indicated the increased use of hydrogen by succinate and lactate producing bacteria is likely to at least partially explain the previously reported lower CH4 emissions from MS fed dairy cows. Furthermore, time had a significant effect on both bacterial and archaeal concentrations, and also bacterial community composition. This indicates that the rumen microbiota had not stabilized after 10 days of feeding the experimental diets.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0229887
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jueeli D Vaidya
Sanne van Gastelen
Hauke Smidt
Caroline M Plugge
Joan E Edwards
spellingShingle Jueeli D Vaidya
Sanne van Gastelen
Hauke Smidt
Caroline M Plugge
Joan E Edwards
Characterization of dairy cow rumen bacterial and archaeal communities associated with grass silage and maize silage based diets.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Jueeli D Vaidya
Sanne van Gastelen
Hauke Smidt
Caroline M Plugge
Joan E Edwards
author_sort Jueeli D Vaidya
title Characterization of dairy cow rumen bacterial and archaeal communities associated with grass silage and maize silage based diets.
title_short Characterization of dairy cow rumen bacterial and archaeal communities associated with grass silage and maize silage based diets.
title_full Characterization of dairy cow rumen bacterial and archaeal communities associated with grass silage and maize silage based diets.
title_fullStr Characterization of dairy cow rumen bacterial and archaeal communities associated with grass silage and maize silage based diets.
title_full_unstemmed Characterization of dairy cow rumen bacterial and archaeal communities associated with grass silage and maize silage based diets.
title_sort characterization of dairy cow rumen bacterial and archaeal communities associated with grass silage and maize silage based diets.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2020-01-01
description The objective of the present study was to characterize the rumen bacterial and archaeal communities in dairy cows fed different ratios of maize silage (MS) and grass silage (GS), and place the findings in the context of ruminal fermentation as well as previously reported methane (CH4) emissions. Rumen fluid from 12 rumen cannulated dairy cows was collected after 10 and 17 days of feeding one of four diets, all of which had the same roughage to concentrate ratio of 80:20 based on dry matter (DM). Roughage in the four diets (GS100, GS0, GS67, GS33) consisted of either 1000 g/kg DM GS (GS100), 1000 g/kg DM MS (GS0), or a mixture of both silages in different proportions [667 g/kg DM GS and 333 g/kg DM MS (GS67); 333 g/kg DM GS and 677 g/kg DM MS (GS33)]. Total volatile fatty acid (VFA) concentrations and the molar proportions of the ruminal VFA were not affected by diet. Only the molar proportion of isovalerate was affected by time, being lower on day 17 than on day 10. Bacterial and archaeal concentrations were not affected by diet but increased from day 10 to day 17. The bacterial community composition was affected by diet, time and diet × time, whereas the archaeal community composition was only affected by diet. Several bacterial and archaeal genus level groups were associated with diet, but not with time. Analysis indicated the increased use of hydrogen by succinate and lactate producing bacteria is likely to at least partially explain the previously reported lower CH4 emissions from MS fed dairy cows. Furthermore, time had a significant effect on both bacterial and archaeal concentrations, and also bacterial community composition. This indicates that the rumen microbiota had not stabilized after 10 days of feeding the experimental diets.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0229887
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