EFFECTS OF DIET AND CHEMICAL FORM OF SELENIUM ON SELENIUM METABOLISM IN SHEEP

Citation
Km. Koenig et al., EFFECTS OF DIET AND CHEMICAL FORM OF SELENIUM ON SELENIUM METABOLISM IN SHEEP, Journal of animal science, 75(3), 1997, pp. 817-827
Citations number
34
Categorie Soggetti
Agriculture Dairy & AnumalScience
Journal title
ISSN journal
00218812
Volume
75
Issue
3
Year of publication
1997
Pages
817 - 827
Database
ISI
SICI code
0021-8812(1997)75:3<817:EODACF>2.0.ZU;2-S
Abstract
The effects of diet composition and chemical form of Se on intestinal flow, absorption, and retention of Se were determined in sheep by the balance technique and by disappearance of Se from sites along the gast rointestinal tract with reference to dual-phase digesta markers. Six s heep with ruminal and duodenal cannulas were used in a crossover desig n with a split-plot arrangement of the Se isotope treatments. Sheep we re fed a forage (alfalfa hay)-based (.37 mg Se/kg) or concentrate (bar ley)-based (.27 mg Se/kg) diet at 90% of ad libitum intake. Selenium s table isotopes (enriched [Se-77]yeast, enriched [Se-82]selenite) and f luid (Co-EDTA) and particulate (Cr-mordanted fiber) markers were admin istered simultaneously into the rumen four times daily for 7 d, and to tal collections of feces and urine were made every 24 h for these and the following 7 d. A larger proportion (51 to 61%) of the Se tracers f lowing to the duodenum was associated with the particulate fraction, m ainly as bacteria-associated Se, than with the fluid fraction. The [Se -82]selenite was more available (P < .05) for absorption and retention than [Se-77]yeast, indicating that inorganic chemical forms of Se are as available to the ruminant as organic forms of Se commonly found in feedstuffs. Selenium absorption and retention were greater (P < .05) in sheep receiving the concentrate-based diet than in sheep receiving the forage-based diet. Thus, the availability of Se from inorganic and organic sources in sheep seems to be influenced by diet composition.