The survival of silage bacteria in the intestine was evaluated by identifying lactic acid bacteria in the feces of dairy cows given whole crop maize silage
Keywords:
dairy cows, , denaturing gradient gel electrophorsis, lactic acid bacteria, quantitative polymerase, chain reaction silageAbstract
One representative silage sample and three separate feces samples from dairy cows on three dairy farms in Hua Bei, China and three
dairy farms in Kyushu, Japan were collected to evaluate the survival of lactic acid bacteria (LAB) in whole crop maize silage in the guts
of dairy cows. Quantitative polymerase chain reaction and denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis were used to analyze the bacterial
community makeup. All bunker-made corn silage samples, independent of dairy farm or sampling location, contained Lactobacillus
acetotolerans. There were eight different LAB species found in the maize silage samples, but only three of them seemed to survive
digestion: L. acetotolerans, L. pontis, and L. casei. Silage and feces L. acetotolerans populations were 106-7 and 103-4 copies/g,
respectively, suggesting that competition in this niche may be tough and the population may drastically decline throughout the
digestion process, even for the LAB species demonstrating possible survival in the gut. Because even surviving species might
experience a significant population drop during digestion, it may be challenging for silage LAB to survive in the stomach of silage-fed
dairy cows.
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