ISSN:
1365-2494
Source:
Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
Topics:
Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
Notes:
To investigate links between the anatomy of grass leaves and their resistance to breakdown in the rumen, leaf blades of the tropical grass, green panic (Panicum maximum var, trichoglume), and the temperate grass, Italian ryegrass (Lolium multiflorum), were chopped into 50 mm lengths and fed fresh to cattle. Particle size reduction of the chewed feed was studied immediately after eating and after digestion in nylon bags in the rumen for 6, 12, 24, 48, 96 h and 3 weeks. The lengths of fibre elements, separated into groups of different diameters, were measured on samples digested for 96 h. The process of tissue breakdown was studied using light and electron microscopy.Green panic leaves had twice the cross-sectional area of thick-walled tissues, a higher vascular bundle frequency per unit leaf width, and less, but more densely packed mesophyll, than did the ryegrass leaves. Despite the contribution of these characteristics to greater leaf rigidity, green panic was broken down to a greater degree by chewing than was ryegrass.During digestion, width reduction of the chewed leaf particles was faster in ryegrass than in green panic because of two anatomical features: (i) the straight-walled intercostal cells of the epidermis in ryegrass were easily separated allowing the epidermis to split, whereas the sinuous walls in green panic were resistant to splitting, and (ii) the epidermis of ryegrass was linked to the vascular bundles by thin-walled mesophyll cells and was shed when these were digested, whereas in green panic the linkage was via thick-walled bundle sheath cells causing the epidermis to remain attached for much longer. Ryegrass leaf was reduced to isolated fibres within 24 h digestion; this process took 〉48 h in green panic. These fibres all had a high resistance to length reduction by digestion irrespective of their anatomical or species origin. Even after 3 weeks in the rumen there was little digestive disruption to the longitudinal walls of these fibres.The isolated vascular fibres of ryegrass were smooth-surfaced in contrast to those of green panic which were rough owing to attached undigested bundle sheath cells and jagged, broken sections of epidermis; this could influence ease of separation of particles from the digesta mass and flow from the rumen.Anatomical differences between these grasses were, therefore, important in the rate of width reduction of leaf particles during digestion and for the characteristics of the isolated fibre, but not for length reduction of particles during digestion
Type of Medium:
Electronic Resource
URL:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2494.1989.tb01911.x
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