PHYSICAL FACTORS THAT INFLUENCE FECAL ANALYSIS ESTIMATES OF HERBIVOREDIETS

Citation
J. Bartolome et al., PHYSICAL FACTORS THAT INFLUENCE FECAL ANALYSIS ESTIMATES OF HERBIVOREDIETS, Journal of range management, 48(3), 1995, pp. 267-270
Citations number
24
Categorie Soggetti
Agriculture Dairy & AnumalScience",Ecology
Journal title
ISSN journal
0022409X
Volume
48
Issue
3
Year of publication
1995
Pages
267 - 270
Database
ISI
SICI code
0022-409X(1995)48:3<267:PFTIFA>2.0.ZU;2-I
Abstract
Microhistological analysis of epidermal fragments in feces is often us ed to estimate the diet of herbivores but is not generally accepted as a consistently reliable method, Gross errors arise, especially when d iets are composed of herbage components with widely different morpholo gical and structural characteristics. The present study investigated t he possibility of using such physical characteristics to improve the r eliability of the method. Over a 7 day period, 4 rumen-fistulated beef cows were given a fixed diet composed of a shrub, a grass, and a forb component, On the last 2 days, samples of rumen content and feces a e re taken for analysis of epidermal fragment, Forbs were under-estimate d, grasses over-estimated, and shrubs correctly estimated, Correction factors to estimate true diet composition were defined as the biomass represented by the specific epidermal fragments (epidermal weight inde x) and the degree of degradation to which the epidermis is subjected i n the digestion process (epidermal erodibility factor), These factors account for characteristic physical features of the different dietary components and were measured directly or were derived from the calibra tion experiment, The utility of such factors depends on accurate deter mination of the component variables and may be overshadowed by samplin g error and observer bias in the microhistological identification of e pidermal fragments.