Litcius/Paper detail

Shift of Feeding Strategies from Grazing to Different Forage Feeds Reshapes the Rumen Microbiota To Improve the Ability of Tibetan Sheep (Ovis aries) To Adapt to the Cold Season

Xiongxiong Cui, Zhaofeng Wang, Penghui Guo, Fuhou Li, Shenghua Chang, T. Yan, Huiru Zheng, Fujiang Hou

2023Microbiology Spectrum38 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

During the cold season, like other high-altitude mammals, Tibetan sheep have to adapt their physiological and nutritional strategies, as well as the structure and function of their rumen microbial community, to the seasonal variation of lower food availability and quality. This study focused on the changes and adaptability in the rumen microbiota of Tibetan sheep when they adapted from grazing to a high-efficiency feeding strategy during the cold season by analyzing the rumen microbiota of Tibetan sheep raised under the different management systems, and it shows the linkages among the rumen core and pan-bacteriomes, nutrient utilization, and rumen short-chain fatty acids. The findings from this study suggest that the feeding strategies potentially contribute to variations in the pan-rumen bacteriome, together with the core bacteriome. Fundamental knowledge on the rumen microbiomes and their roles in nutrient utilization furthers our understanding of how rumen microbial adaptation to harsh environments may function in hosts. The facts obtained from the present trial clarified the possible mechanisms of the positive effects of feeding strategy on nutrient utilization and rumen fermentation in harsh environments.

Topics & Concepts

OvisForageGrazingRumenBiologyCold climateOvis canadensisEcologyGeographyFood scienceFermentationPopulationMedicineEnvironmental healthMeteorologyRuminant Nutrition and Digestive PhysiologyPasture and Agricultural SystemsRangeland Management and Livestock Ecology