학술논문

Periodical Changes of Feces Microbiota and Its Relationship with Nutrient Digestibility in Early Lambs.
Document Type
Article
Source
Animals (2076-2615). Jul2022, Vol. 12 Issue 14, p1770-N.PAG. 16p.
Subject
*LAMBS
*GUT microbiome
*FECES
*DIGESTION
*COLONIZATION (Ecology)
*ARTIFICIAL feeding
Language
ISSN
2076-2615
Abstract
Simple Summary: The birth-to-weaning period is critical for the development of digestibility and the intestinal microflora of lambs. This study aimed to analyze the developmental changes of the intestinal microflora and the host-apparent digestibility in this critical stage, and the interaction and causal relationship between them. The results showed that the fecal microbial diversity, and the abundance of some bacteria showed regular changes before lambs were 49 days old. Rapid changes in nutrient intake and digestibility are major factors that influence the fecal microbiota by affecting the composition of fermentable substrates in feces. Moreover, some bacteria were not affected by the fecal nutrient content, which is an important environmental factor, but were closely related to the lambs' nutrient-apparent digestibility. These bacteria might have a regulatory role in nutrient digestibility. Early mammal gut microorganism colonization affects host health, the feed conversion rate, and production performance. Herein, we explored how fecal microbiota develops and the interactions between microorganisms and nutrients. The lambs were separated from ewes at 7 days old, artificial feeding with milk replacer completely replaced lactation, and the starter diet was added. At 21 days old, the lambs were fed with complete starter and milk replacer was stopped. At day 7, 21, 35, and 49 after birth, fecal samples were collected. Then 16S rRNA gene sequencing in the fecal samples revealed that the alpha diversity increased significantly with age. Principal coordinates analysis showed clear clustering by age (p < 0.05). At the genus level, the relative abundance of 8 genera declined, 12 genera increased (p < 0.1), and 4 genera changed dramatically with age (p < 0.05). The apparent digestibility of dry matter, protein, fat, neutral detergent fiber, and acid detergent fiber significantly decreased by 21.77%, 23.15%, 23.62%, 19.38%, and 45.24%, respectively, from 7 to 35 days of age (p < 0.05), but not thereafter (p > 0.05). Fecal nutrient contents affected the abundance of bacterial genera (p < 0.05). Enterobacteriaceae_unclassified, Clostridium XlVb, Bifidobacterium, and other genera had no relationship with the fecal nutrient content; however, they were closely related to nutrient intake and digestibility, possibly promoting nutrient digestion. Our results suggested that nutrient digestion of young lambs changed rapidly, which was closely related to intestinal microbial colonization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]