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Differences in composition and diversity of rumen fungi in buffalo fed different diets

Rongjiao Wang, Shichun He, Dan Huang, Shaoying He, Taiqing Guo, Tao Chen, Hongen Peng, Latie Jiaka, Min He, Changguo Chen, Dingzhou Song, Xiujun Huang, Dongwang Wu, Huaming Mao

2023Animal Biotechnology12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The rumen is a complex ecosystem containing a variety of fungi, which are crucial for the digestive activities of ruminants. Previous research on rumen fungi has mainly focused on anaerobic fungi, given the rumen’s reputation as a mainly anaerobic environment. The objective of this study was to investigate rumen fungal diversity and the presence of aerobic fungi in buffalo fed on different diets. Three adult buffaloes were used as experimental animals. Alfalfa hay, oat hay, whole corn silage, sugarcane shoot silage, fresh king grass, dried rice straw, and five kinds of mixed diets with concentrate to roughage ratios of 20:80, 35:65, 50:50, 65:35, and 80:20 were used as the experimental diets. The experimental animals were fed different diets for 22 days. Rumen fluid was collected from the rumen fistula for ITS (Internal Transcribed Spacer) sequencing 2 h after feeding on the morning of day 22. The results indicate the presence of large quantities of aerobic fungi in the rumen of the buffaloes 2 h after feeding and suggest that Ascomycota and Basidiomycota are the dominant fungal groups under different feeding conditions. The study also identified 62 different fungal types, which showed significant differences among the 11 experimental diets.

Topics & Concepts

RumenBiologySilageHayRuminantStrawComposition (language)Animal scienceBotanyAgronomyFood scienceFermentationLinguisticsCropPhilosophyRuminant Nutrition and Digestive PhysiologyPlant and fungal interactionsWheat and Barley Genetics and Pathology
Differences in composition and diversity of rumen fungi in buffalo fed different diets | Litcius