Publication | Closed Access
Fermentation in the Rumen of the Sheep
50
Citations
14
References
1952
Year
NutritionComplex MixturesDistillation Methods GrayFeed UtilizationFood ChemistryFatty AcidsFeed AdditiveAnimal FeedAnimal ProductionChromatographyHealth SciencesAnimal PhysiologyIn Vitro FermentationAnimal NutritionFeed EvaluationAnimal SciencePhysiologyFeed IntakeMicrobiologyMetabolismMedicineMeat Science
ABSTRACT Early workers in the field of ruminant physiology were aware of the presence of formic, acetic, propionic and butyric acids (Tappeiner, 1884), and of smaller amounts of higher members of the saturated fatty acid series (Mangold, 1934), in the rumen fluid. Accurate data were not reported, however, until recently, when partition chromatography became available as an analytical procedure for the analysis of complex mixtures of these acids (Elsden, 1946). By this means acetic, propionic and butyric acids were established as the main components of the mixture of fatty acids in the rumen fluid of sheep and of other ruminants. The butyric acid fraction, however, was thought to contain some higher acid or acids, and it was claimed that formic acid was not a component of the mixture (Elsden, 1945). Using modifications of the older partition and distillation methods Gray (1946) found similar proportions of the three main acids, but also stated that small amounts of formic acid were normally present.
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