Developing an energy evaluation protocol for horse feeds in South Africa.
Date
2004
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Abstract
The purpose of this study was to find the most accurate and reliable method available in South
Africa to evaluate equine diets on an energy basis. Currently South African horse owners
purchase food according to the crude protein content of the diet, not knowing the energy
density of the diet, which they are feeding their animals. Energy is one of the most important
measures of an animal feed, as the energy density determines how much of a diet needs to be
fed to meet an animal's requirement. The level of feed intake determines the concentrations of
all other nutrients in the diet, therefore one cannot formulate a diet correctly without
knowledge of its energy content. Through domestication, there has been an increased demand
for horses to perform under circumstances that require energy greater than that provided by its
natural diet of grass alone. This has therefore lead to the inclusion of cereal grains and their
by-products. These large grain meals can overwhelm the digestive capacity of the horse thus
leading to various types ofdigestive disorders such as colic. Therefore by the development of
an energy evaluation system, one could provide the horse with the correct amount of energy
from the appropriate source without compromising its digestive system. Predicting
digestibility of a diet is the basic step for energy evaluation of horse feeds. Currently horse
diets in South Africa are formulated using ruminant total digestible nutrient (TDN) data. As
large horses are difficult to work with in digestibility trials, a preliminary experiment was
designed to see how accurate it would be to use miniature horses as predictors of digestible
energy for large horses. By comparing the digestibility data with that of overseas predictive
equations, where large horses were used, the results were found to be highly comparable. As it
was established that miniature horses were a perfect pilot animal for digestibility studies on
large horses, the next step was to determine the rate of passage in miniature horses so as to
determine if the length of the collection period, in a digestibility trial, proposed by overseas
researchers for large horses, was enough time to clear the digestive system in a miniature
horse of the diet under investigation. An experiment was carried out using Celite® as an
insoluble marker to determine rates of passage via the acid insoluble ash method. A mean
retention time of 66.64 hours was obtained, therefore assuring that a collection period of 5
days, as recommended by overseas researchers, was sufficient time to clear the miniature
horse's digestive system of the test diet.
Following the preliminary trial, a digestibility experiment was designed to investigate the
accuracy of using ruminant data to formulate equine diets as well as using rabbits as a possible
pilot animal in horse digestibility trials. The trial involved five miniature horses, four male
sheep and ten rabbits. Four commercial horse diets were investigated. From these results it
was found that rabbits proved difficult too work with and did not favour the experimental
conditions and therefore gave digestibility results very different to that of the equine.
Ruminants proved accurate predictors of the digestibility of the fibre components for horses
but not for the other digestible nutrients. Significant differences were found between the diets
given only to the horses and diets that should have provided a higher digestible energy did not.
This accentuates the need for the development of an energy evaluation protocol, so that equine
diets can be formulated more precisely and thereby ensure that the energy requirements of the
horse are met.
In vivo digestibility results were compared to the same feeds incubated in vitro and significant
differences (P<0.05) were found between the results obtained by the two methods. A possible
reason for this could be the method employed for removing supernatant between the two
stages of the Tilley and Terry (1963) method, leading to an overestimation of digestibility for
feeds containing hay and incubated in vitro. No significant differences (P>0.05) were found
between digestibilities, rates and maximum gas production between the sources of inoculum
used. Significant differences (P<0.05) were found between digestibilities obtained by
incubating concentrates alone or in an 80:20 ratio with hay. Further investigation is needed
here as it was felt that the supernatant removal method contributed significantly to inaccurate
in vitro results.
This experimental work centres on discovering and developing the best method available to
the South African feed industry for predicting digestible energy contents of horse feed, so as to
improve defined performance within an equine discipline and reduce nutritionally-induced
disorders.
Description
Thesis (M.Sc.Agric.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2004.
Keywords
Horses--Feeding and feeds., Horses--Nutrition., Feeds--Evaluation., Feeds--Analysis., Energy metabolism., Theses--Animal and poultry science.