Bg. D'Heer et al., The filter bag versus the conventional filtration technique for the determination of crude fibre and Van Soest cell wall constituents, J ANIM FEED, 9(3), 2000, pp. 513-526
To determine crude fibre (CF), NDF, ADF and ADL, the conventional technique
(CT), using filter crucibles, was compared with the filter bag technique (
FBT). The mean CF content of 56 forages and concentrates was slightly, but
significantly lower (P<0.001) with FBT than with CT (144 vs 138 g kg(-1) DM
). The two techniques were highly correlated (0.996) and FBT had better rep
eatability. The mean CF content of 28 faeces samples was similar for both t
echniques, but repeatability with FBT was worse. The latter was greatly imp
roved by reducing the sample weight from 1 to 0.5 g. For NDF a comparative
study was done with 10 non-starchy feeds, 14 starchy feeds, as well as with
28 feed residues from in sacco incubations. To obtain similar values with
FBT as with CT, it is recommended to use a sample weight of 0.5 g and to ad
d for all starch containing samples 12 mi of an <alpha>-amylase solution, e
qually spread over the digestion and the first two rinsing periods. For ADF
of 11 feeds the correlation between the two techniques improved from 0.993
to 0.997 when 0.5 instead of 1.0 g sample was incubated and repeatability
was clearly better for the FBT. For ADL of 12 feeds, after sequential analy
sis of NDF and ADF, the FBT showed excellent precision and no significant d
ifference with the CT.