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About myself…. 3 rd year Graduate Student at UBC working towards a Master of Science Degree Program: Ruminant nutrition Department: Animal Science Faculty: Agricultural Sciences. Where I work…. -UBC Dairy Education and Research Centre -Pacific Agri-Food Research Centre (PARC)
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About myself… • 3rd year Graduate Student at UBC • working towards a Master of Science Degree • Program: Ruminant nutrition • Department: Animal Science • Faculty: Agricultural Sciences
Where I work… -UBC Dairy Education and Research Centre -Pacific Agri-Food Research Centre (PARC) Agassiz, BC
The main dairy barn 225 lactating cows 200 cow replacement herd
In the dairy barn Free stall design 12 cow groups Parallel double 12 milking parlour
My Research: • Study the effects of nitrogen (N) fertilization on protein quality of forage grass
Nitrogen forms • N2: nitrogen gas • NO3-: nitrate • NO2-: nitrite • NH3: ammonia
Amino Acid H H O N-C-C An amino acid H R OH
Proteins • 2 amino acids together: dipeptide • 3 or more amino acids together: polypeptide • Polypeptide chain(s): protein
Plant nitrogen • 80% of the atmosphere composed of N2 • This N is unavailable for plant nutrition • Ammonia (NH3 ) is the only form of nitrogen that can be utilized by the plant
Nitrogen fixation and oxidation • Nitrogen fixation: convert N2 to NH3 • Rhizobium and other types of bacteria have enzymes that fix nitrogen • Nitrogen oxidation: convert N2 to NO3- • Lightning oxidizes nitrogen
Nitrate converted to ammonia • Plants and bacteria have enzymes that are capable of converting NO3- to NO2 - • Plants and bacteria also have enzymes that are capable of convertingNO2 – to NH3
Ammonia to amino acids, etc. • Ammonia is converted via metabolic pathways into amino acids, nucleotides, and other nitrogen containing molecules.
The nitrogen cycle N2 NO3- NO2 - NH3 amino acids, nucleotides, etc.
Nitrogen fertilizers • Ammonia, nitrates • Urea, urea formaldehyde • Urease required for breakdown • Organic wastes • Slow release
Cows are ruminants rumen reticulum omasum abomasum
Ruminants • “Four chambered stomach”: • Reticulum sorts feed • Rumen is full of microbes that ferment feed • Largest compartment (fits up to 200lbs of feed) • Omasum filters and absorbs • Abomasum is comparable to our stomach • Cows ruminate
Cows are ruminants rumen reticulum omasum abomasum
Nutrition Made Simple • Cows (like us) are a moving clump of matter • Cows need both building material and energy (to build and move) in diet • Building material comes from protein • Energy comes from carbohydrates
Ruminant nutrition protein terms… • Crude protein: % nitrogen in a sample x 6.25 • “Typical” protein molecule is 1/16 nitrogen • 1/16 = 0.0625 • Problem: not all nitrogen in food is in protein form
Non Protein Nitrogen and True Protein: • Crude protein is made up of non-protein nitrogen (NPN) and true protein (TP) • Non-protein nitrogen (NPN): nitrogen not in protein molecules (free peptides, free aa, nitrates, ammonia, etc) • True protein (TP): nitrogen in the form of proteins (peptides linked together)
Protein: • Rumen degradable protein (RDP): non-protein nitrogen (NPN) and true protein (TP) that is degraded into non-protein nitrogen in the rumen. • Rumen undegradable protein (RUP): true protein (TP) that is not degraded in the rumen.
Protein in Feed NPN RDP TP crude protein RUP
Protein Digestion Rumen Feed RDP rumen degradable protein Crude Protein ammonia Microbial protein built using N from RDP RUP rumen undegraded proteins Intestine Digestion of MP and RUP
Carbohydrate digestion Feed Rumen Carbs Sugar Used by microbes for energy Fermentation VFAs Waste product of microbes Energy Source for Cow
Energy metabolism in humans cell glucose Pyruvic acid Acetyl CoA ADP O2 Citric acid cycle CO2 mitochondria nucleus ATP H2O
The three VFAs used for energy: • Acetate • Butyrate • Propionate
VFA metabolism in cows Butyrate cell Acetate Ketone bodies Propionate Acetyl CoA ADP O2 Citric acid cycle CO2 mitochondria nucleus ATP H2O
Humans: Excess glucose used to make fat Cattle: Unable to make fat directly from glucose Excess acetate used for fat production Human vs. Cattle fat production
My Research: RUP from Forage Grass Problems: • Lactating dairy cows need a lot of protein in their diet • A lot of dairy cow diets have too much RDP and too little RUP
Environmental concerns • Both NO3- and NH4+ are water soluble • NO3- is also readily leached out of the soil • NH4+ associates with soil colloid particles and resists leaching
Plant Nitrogen usage nitrates, ammonia etc. converted into plant proteins nitrates, ammonia etc. taken up by plants nitrates, ammonia etc. from ground
Possible Solution Increase the RUP content of forages: • Reduce N fertilization • Alter harvest schedules • Identify genetics that give more RUP
What we are doing • We are growing three types of grass in 56 plots • Each plot is either given 0, 200, or 400 kgs of N fertilizer a year • Plots are cut several times a year and grass is allowed to dry to between 25-35% DM
Harvest • Grass is chopped and put into mini silos • Samples are taken before and after ensiling and analyzed for CP, TP and fibre
hydraulic press mini silo
Rumen Degradabilities • Silage is incubated in the rumens of cannulated cows: • Incubated silage analyzed for CP • Know N percentage before and after • Assess RDP and RUP
A rumen cannulated cow cannula plug
feed being digested
Cannula Rumen wall Mesh bag
What We Have Found: • Reducing N fertilizer levels decreases the content of non-protein nitrogen (NPN) in grass • Less non-protein nitrogen = more true protein in grass • More true protein = more rumen undegradable protein
Consider a Career in Agricultural Science • Agricultural community/ farm background • Education in rural setting • Good job prospects