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Nutrients and Nutrient Requirements

Nutrients and Nutrient Requirements. Topic 3041 Anna Blight Modified by Ashlee Gibson. Nutrients. Any feed component that functions in the support of life. Carbon (C) Calcium (Ca) Chlorine (Cl) Cobalt (Co) Copper (Cu) Fluorine (F) Hydrogen (H) Iodine (I) Iron (Fe)

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Nutrients and Nutrient Requirements

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  1. Nutrients and Nutrient Requirements Topic 3041 Anna Blight Modified by Ashlee Gibson

  2. Nutrients Any feed component that functions in the support of life

  3. Carbon (C) Calcium (Ca) Chlorine (Cl) Cobalt (Co) Copper (Cu) Fluorine (F) Hydrogen (H) Iodine (I) Iron (Fe) Magnesium (Mg) Manganese (Mn) Molybdenum (Mo) Nitrogen (N) Oxygen (O) Phosphorus (P) Potassium (K) Selenium (Se) Sodium (Na) Sulfur (S) Zinc (Zn) 20 Chemical Elements in Nutrients

  4. Six Basic Classes of Nutrients • Water • Carbohydrates • Fats • Proteins • Vitamins • Minerals

  5. Concentrates Cereal grains Oil meals Molasses Dried milk products Roughages Hays and straws Silage Cut green feeds Grazed forages Composition of Feeds

  6. Concentrates • High in energy • Low in fiber • Highly digestible • Includes corn, wheat, barley, oats, milo, soybean meal, linseed meal, and cottonseed meal

  7. Roughages • Less digestible than concentrates • Bulkier, coarser feed

  8. Water • Most important nutrient • Contains hydrogen and oxygen • Transports other nutrients • Helps maintain normal body temperature

  9. Water Consumption in ONE day

  10. Carbohydrates • Major energy source • Contains carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen • Found in grains and hays

  11. Types of Carbohydrates • Starches • Grain, root crops, other plant materials • Sugars • Simple sugars (monosaccharides) • Double sugars (disaccharides) • Milk and fruit • Fiber • Plant cell walls and cellulose • Fermented by bacteria in foregut of ruminant and hind gut fermentors (require in their diet)

  12. Fats • Fats and oils are primary energy source • 2.25 times more energy / pound than carbohydrates • Contains carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen

  13. Protein • Only nutrient class that contains nitrogen • Protein in feeds contain average of 16% nitrogen • Building blocks of the body • Proteins compose most of the muscle mass

  14. Important factors in feeding protein: When feeding protein • The amount of protein. • The quality of protein. • The compliment of amino acids in proteins

  15. Ruminants vs Non-Ruminants Protein Ruminants can make essential amino acids • Done by rumen bacteria • from simple forms of nitrogen Urea • Only used for Ruminants • Protein substitute • Source of nitrogen of rumen organisms to produce bacteria • Used only in small amounts

  16. Protein from animals • Fish meal • Meat and bone meal • milk • blood meal

  17. Protein from plants • Soybean oil meal • Soybeans • Cottonseed meal • Canola • Legumes

  18. Plant Protein • Location of Protein in feed material • The "germ" is the part of the grain kernel which usually contains available protein.

  19. Minerals • Elements other than carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, and nitrogen • Macrominerals are required in larger amounts • Microminerals required in smaller amounts • Necessary for healthy body functions

  20. Vitamins • Organic nutrients, contain carbon • Provide for very specific body functions • Required in very small amounts • 16 known vitamins in animal nutrition • A, C, D, E, K, choline and the B-complex vitamins

  21. Energy • Two basic functions run by energy • are maintenance and reproduction • Supplied by nutrients containing carbon • Carbohydrates, fats, and proteins all supply • energy • Energy evaluation of feeds is measured • by total digestible nutrients, digestible • energy, energy for metabolism, and • net energy

  22. Importance of Nutrition Energy supplied by nutrients are used to drive a variety of body functions and power animal movement

  23. Healthy and productive livestock require proper nutrition Reference Taylor, R.E., Field, T.G. (1998). Scientific Farm Animal Production. Upper Saddle River: Prentice Hall. Pp. 269-282.

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