Ruminant nutrition final

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111 Terms

1
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Rumensen- smaller more frequent meals

aureomyosin- VFD

Metabolic BW- metabolically active tissue, not SA related

70lbs between BCS ish

2
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Choose the defining characteristic(s) of ruminants:

Pregastric Fermentation, Herbivores, Ungulates

3
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The rumen is composed of 5 sacs. Which one is NOT considered a sac of the rumen?

Dorsal

Ventral Blind

Dorsal Blind

Cranial

Ventral

reticulum

reticulum

4
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Why should a prey species have a ruminant gastrointestinal tract?

Ruminants can digest later on in a safe place

Ruminant digestive systems allow for increased time in between meals

5
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Volatile fatty acids are an end product of fermentation. What are the 3 most common VFA's and their total number of carbons?

Acetate C2, Propionate C3, Butyrate C4

6
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The WHERE  is the main site of pregastric fermentation, while the WHERE does this but also catches harmful objects. Most water absorption happens in the WHERE which may also act as a pump regulating liquid passage. The WHERE is the site of gastric secretions. Absorbing nutrients within the stomach complex happens most efficiently in the WHERE

rumen, reticulum, omasum, abomasum, rumen

7
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In the abomasum, cheif cells synthesize ____.

Pepsin

8
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Why is it important to know the evolution of the ruminant gastrointestinal tract?

The adaptation of the ruminant GI tract allows diverse species to thrive through symbiosis.

9
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What does the microflora NOT contribute to the symbiosis relationship with a ruminant?

Controls the temperature

10
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What is an example of a chemical property that influences digestion?

heat treatment

11
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T/F: Dry matter intake and physical characteristics of feed influence residence time, while rate of fermentation is influenced by concentration of microbes and intrinsic traits of feed. 

True

12
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What type of grazing strategy do sheep exhibit?

Intermediate Feeder

13
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What happens in the gastrointestinal tract of a browser?

Lower retention time

14
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The prehensile action of cattle and goats differ. Generally, WHAT are the least discriminate when choosing what to eat whereas WHAT are the most discriminate because they use their lips and teeth to pick through plant parts easily. 

Cattle, goats

15
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Why is it not always a good idea to put sheep and cattle together when interspecies grazing?

They compete for the same resources

16
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Typically, cattle are harvested around 80% of physiological maturity. Which of the following might result in a shift of the ideal time of harvest from 80% of physiological maturity for cattle? Select all that apply

Change in value of the animal, Change in feed price

17
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Where is puberty defined on the composition of gain curve?

More than 50% of caloric intake contributes to adipose gain

18
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Where do animals partition nutrients to before anything else?

Maintenance

19
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Why is it difficult to get dairy cows pregnant during lactation?

They partition nutrients toward lactation over reproduction

20
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Which nutrients provide energy for the body to use?

Carbohydrates, protein, lipids

21
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The amount of energy to raise the temperature of 1 mL of water by 1 degree Celsius is a WHAT

calorie

22
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What units of measure are most often used for energy among ruminant nutritionists when evaluating cattle diets?

Mcal

23
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Having a positive retained energy means cattle have enough energy towards development, gain, or lactation. What does it mean when an animal is in a negative energy balance?

Expending more energy than they are getting from food

24
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Immunity, Reproduction, Lactation, Muscle, etc. have a metabolic priority in the body. What happens in the bloodstream regarding delivery of nutrients?

Changes in nutrient flux depending on the metabolic priority

25
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In the net energy system, there is WHAT energy lost between gross energy and digestible energy. Net energy is differentiated from metabolizable energy due to WHAT energy losses

fecal, heat

26
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What does TDN stand for?

Total digestible nutrients

27
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What is the fatal flaw with the TDN calculation?

The assumption that protein and carbohydrates have the same amount of energy per gram

28
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The energy in 1 kg of corn = the energy in 1 kg of alfalfa

False

29
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Why is the TDN assumption of energy from protein an issue? CHECK

There is not always the same metabolic cost to metabolize protein from animal to animal, It can depend on the animals need to metabolize protein for energy, The amount of protein consumed is dynamic

30
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Energy is important when formulating cattle diets because we want to add pounds to an animal that will increase its value at market. How can we guess the final shrunk body weight of an animal we are feeding? CHECK

Using the mother's body weight at maturity, using frame size, Using industry averages

31
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Animals metabolize protein to use for energy. What happens when an animal consumes more protein than it needs?

Energy is lost through urea

32
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It is difficult to measure NEg in growing animals. Why is it much easier to measure energy used by a dairy cow?

Energy can be directly measured through the milk

33
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The types of glycosidic linkages between monosaccharides have major effects on energy and gain when metabolized in a growing animal.  What type of glycosidic linkage does sucrose have?

alpha

34
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Which is not a function of carbohydrates used by ruminants?

Structural components of muscle fibers

35
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Carbohydrates are required for the body each day to function.

False

36
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Amylose, Amylopectin, and Glycogen are all forms of starch used by ruminants. What is the structural benefit of these molecules being branched? Select all that apply.

Branching compacts the molecule requiring less space, Branched molecules have a greater amount of anomeric carbons to increase solubility in water

37
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In aerobic fermentation, oxygen acts as the final electron acceptor. What does not act as a final electron acceptor in anaerboic fermentation? 

Ca+

38
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Ruminant WHAT can breakdown starch, cellulose, and hemicellulose into glucose or fructose. Glu and Fru go through WHAT to form pyruvate. Pyruvate creates WHAT from fermentation that can further be metabolized and used by the animal. 

microbes, glycolysis, VFAs

39
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Microbes are beneficial when an animal does not have the ability to digest a nutrient itself. What is a cost to the ruminant with the presence of microbes?

Microbes oxidize nutrients the animal could utilize on its own

40
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VFAs are important because they are used for many functions throughout the body. Acetate is used for WHAT synthesis. WHAT is used in gluconeogenisis to form glucose. Epithelial fuel sources, like Butyrate , are other types of energy that allow for glucose sparing by gastrointestinal tissues. 

lipid, propionate, butyrate

41
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What are the benefits of altering the VFA profile to propionate? Select all that apply.

Decreases methane production, Increases circulating glucose

42
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Feed processing increases rates of digestion and influences changes in VFA's, like greater propionate digestion. Which is not a type of feed processing?

Adding an essential oil

43
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Ionophores, like monensin, are used in more than 90% of cattle diets. What is an effect of adding an ionophore to a ration?

Increase propionate production

44
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Buffers are used in cattle diets to control acidity of the rumen. Typically, a weak base is used. It dissociates and creates an ion in the rumen. The greater amount of ions create a WHAT environment that increases body water flow into the rumen. Essentially, flushing the WHAT out of the rumen and diluting the ruminal liquid. 

hydrophobic, acid

45
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Lactic acidosis is caused when the pH decreases and lactogenic bacteria take over due to highly fermentable carbohydrates in the diet. What are signs of lactic acidosis?

Abscessed liver, Poor feed intake, Diarrhea, Laminitis

46
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T/F: Fiber is digested in the small intestine of ruminants.

False

47
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Associative effects can be positive or negative depending on the concentrate:forage ratio and bacteria that participate in the fermentation of those feeds for energy. What is an example of a negative associate effect?

Competition within the microflora of the rumen

48
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Amino acids are all structured with an amine group, a carboxyl, and an R group. Which amino acids are used in protein production?

Alpha

49
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From the diet, proteins are used for many metabolic mechanisms. What is not a function of protein?

Formation of triglycerides

50
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The multiple stave hypothesis explains that ruminants can only synthesize as much protein according to the concentration of the limiting amino acid. What can we do to increase protein synthesis?

Increase the concentration of the limiting amino acid

51
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Crude protein is a guess based off of the percent Nitrogen multiplied by a constant. Why do nutritionist use crude protein versus true protein?

It is hard to account for microbial crude protein, Nitrogen concentration is easily measurable

52
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Which vitamin(s) can be synthesized in the rumen?

Vitamin K, vitamin B

53
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Is water hardness an issue in terms of palatability for ruminants?

NoCalcium should be supplied at 1 % DM from Limestone in cattle rations.

54
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Calcium should be supplied at WHAT% DM from WHAT in cattle rations.

1%, limestone

55
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What macro mineral is important to feeding DDGS?

Sulfur

56
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In green lush pastures spring cattle may develop grass tetany. Producers can provide high _____ mineral to unlock alternative absorption pathways to alleviate mineral interactions in the spring forages. 

Magnesium

57
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Ruminants lose water in many different ways. Which one has the greatest total body water loss (>50%)?

Respiration

58
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What factors influence water intake in ruminants?

DMI, Lactation, Temperature, Availability

59
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If cattle do not seem to be eating, what is the first thing a producer should consider

checking the waterer

60
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Water can be expressed as a function of body weight. On average, about how much water should cattle be consuming per day?

1 gal/ 100 lbs

61
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Along the gastrointestinal tract, the epithelium consist of WHAT epithelium. These epithelium have WHAT meaning there is an apical and basolateral side.

columnar, directionality

62
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In ruminal fermentation of protein, there is a soluble fraction, a potentially fermentable fraction and a non-fermentable by microbes fraction. Which parts make up the equations for ruminally degradable protein and ruminally undegradable protein?

RDP=

RUP=

RDP = A + dB

RUP = C + uB

63
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The rate of disappearance (Kd) of protein is influenced by what factors

Heat, Partical size, rumen pH

64
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The concept of asynchrony revolves around the animal rapidly fermenting carbohydrates, but not having enough protein available to the microbes. What is a consequence of this?

Decreased fermentation

65
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Why is it less common to see protein and carbohydrate synchrony?

The urea cycle keeps high amounts of protein cycling for 3-4 days

66
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Why does the liver resynthesize urea from ammonia (NH3) and CO2?

NH3 is a charged molecule

67
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How much metabolizable protein is provided to the ruminant from MCP?

64%

68
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T/F: Amino acids fed to an animal are the same amino acids found in the product made from the animal. 

False

69
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Limiting amino acids prevent protein use by livestock. What can we do when feeding production animals to meet their different amino acid requirements?

Use protein complementation

70
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What are other ways to increase protein utilization in livestock, besides protein complementation?

Synthetic amino acids, Ruminally protected amino acids

71
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WHAT AA are not synthesized in the body but are used for protein synthesis. WHAT AA are not synthesized in adequate amounts to support an important physiological process.

Essential, functional

72
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What is this primary role of vitamins and trace minerals in the ruminant feeding industry?

Act as a vehicle whereby service fees are charged to producers

73
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What is commonly used to protect against iodine deficiency?

Iodized salt

74
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Where are trace minerals typically stored?

tissue

75
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What source of trace minerals is typically the cheapest?

inorganic

76
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Animals do not require any nutrient as a percent. What is a reasonable estimate to establish a nutrient requirement?

Dry matter intake

77
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T/F: All warm-blooded mammals eat to a common energy endpoint when not limited by physical fill.

True

78
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When the caloric density of the diet increases then total feed intake WHAT and the energy intake WHAT .

decreases, stays the same

79
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What mechanism currently explains how cattle achieve satiety in short periods of time?

Hepatic Oxidation Theory

80
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Chemostatic regulation of intake relates to the hormones and nervous signaling that tell the brain to stop eating. What affects this? Select all that apply.

Rate of digestion, Soluble nutrients, Caloric density of the diet

81
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Ruminants and nonruminants differ in the sense of metabolic fuels because nonruminants utilize ____________ while ruminants utilize propionate.

glucose

82
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Feed intake increases propionate that then signals satiety through what reaction?

oxidation

83
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The hormone leptin from WHERE decreases appetite and decreases body weight. Ghrelin is another hormone from the WHERE that increases appetite and increases body weight. 

adipose, stomach

84
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Why might an animal feel hungry if they have increased body fat when leptin is supposed to decrease appetite?

Insulin has a negative feedback on leptin

85
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The hepatic oxidation theory's function on short-term feed intake is thought to function similarly in ruminants and non-ruminants. Why then does the difference in digestion of food in ruminants result in an increased importance when feeding highly fermentable diets? Select all that apply. 

High risk of acidosis, Rapid fermentation means more acid production

86
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Are predictions of dry matter intake increased, decreased, or not affected by anabolic steroids?

increased by 6%

87
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Propionate from rumen fermentation of CHO is used in which metabolic process to help in the formation of energy for the animal to use?

TCA Cycle

88
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Dairy x Beef crosses entering the beef system is a great example of how DMI is affected by breed type because...

Crosses eat 4% more than beef animals

89
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What drives predictions of dry matter intake when one assumes no environmental or outside influences?

Caloric content of the diet

90
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The presence of mud WHAT intake and WHAT caloric expenditure.  

decreases, increases

91
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Which ionophore contributes to reductions in daily feed intake?

Monensin

92
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Why do we feed fiber to ruminants?

increase rumination, decrease eating rate, increase efficiency, decrease cost of gain

93
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When cows sort through feed, they do not receive all the nutrients they need. What can we do to help prevent sorting?

add water

94
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Feeding silage to ruminants allows for many benefits to the cow and the producer. What is NOT a benefit to feeding silage?

Ensiling allows a place for aerobic bacteria to produce toxins

95
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During silage fermentation, we want WHAT as a product because it has HOW MUCH energy loss and HOW MUCH dry matter loss. This allows for a higher energy availability from the plant.

lactate, little, no

96
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To get a proper ensiling, what particle size is best to produce the most lactic acid?

small particle size, easy to pack

97
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T/F: To determine whole plant moisture content, one can look at the black line formed on the kernel of the corn plant.  

false

98
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Fasting heat production and Net energy for maintenance are equal because....

Energy cannot be created nor destroyed

99
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What are some ways cattle can adapt during heat stress? Select all that apply.

decrease feed intake, Sweat, increase respiration rate

100
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Cattle with a very low body condition score have a higher need to mobilize body fat to deal with stress. This can also be referred to as....

Negative energy balance