Title: N
1Dietary fibre
crude fibre NSP dietary fibre NDF ADF ADL
cellulose cellulose cellulose cellulose cellulose
hemicel-lulose hemicel-lulose hemicel-lulose hemicel-lulose
lignin lignin lignin lignin lignin
pektin pektin
ß-glucan ß-glucan
arabinoxylan arabinoxylan
not the total content
2Cellulose
- cell wall structure (10-15 thousand glucose
units) - does not soluble in water
- higher animals and humans cant digest
- bacteria in the rumen and large intestine produce
cellulase enzyme
3The structure of starch and cellulose
starch
cellulose
4Hemicelluloses
- closely associated with cellulose
- can bind water
- not homogenous structure (glucose, galactose,
mannose, xylose, arabinose polymers) - can metabolise only bacteria
5Pectic subtances
- the first compound of primary cell walls
- the linear chain of galacturonic acid
- good water absorbing capacity
- soluble in hot water, but animals can not digest
- contains considerable gelling properties (jam
making)
6Lignin
- is not a well defined compound
- alcohol polymer
- high résistance to chemical degradation
- binding to cell wall polysaccharides, mostly
cellulose - wood products and straw are rich
- do not solve in water
- from nutritional point of view has a negative
effect
7Other fibre compounds
- ?-glucan, arabinoxylan (wheat, barley, rye,
oats) - anti-nutritive effect
- increasing the viscosity of the digesta
- decrease the digestibility of nutrients
- sticky droppings, Salmonella contamination of
eggs - chitin
- a linear polymer of glucose amine, containing
insects, fungi, and green algae - exudate gums
- produces from wounds of plants, contains
arabinose, galactose, glucuronic acid
8(No Transcript)
9The effect of fibre in the nutrition of ruminants
- chewing, rumination, producing saliva, rumen
contraction - structural fibre (min. 75 of crude fibre)
- only microbes in the digestive tract produce
digestive enzymes (cellulase, hemicellulase etc.) - energy source, precursor of volatile fatty acids
- has an influence on the time of rumen
fermentation, the transport time of chyme in the
intestine
10Rumen degradation of dietary carbohydrates
- hemicellulose CH3
- cellulose CO
- pectin COOH acetate
- starch pyruvate propionate
- sucrose butyrate
- lactose
11The effect of fibre in the nutrition of
monogastric animals
- bacterial degradation only in the caecum and
large intestine (horse, rabbits) - peristaltic movement of the intestine
- horse gt rabbit gt pig gt poultry
- 12-20 10-14 3-8 3-6
- young animals need less
- high fibre decrease the digestibility of the
other nutrients - increase endogenous losses
- chyme transport time decrease
- high fibre means less concentrated food
- satiety feeling
12Symptoms of fibre deficiency
- rumen function disturbances
- constipation
- anorexy
- oesophageal and stomach ulcers
13Crude fibre content of some feedstuffs ()
alfalfa 6,9
corn silage 12,9
hay (good quality) 25,8
barley straw 35,6
barley 4,9
wheat 2,6
corn grain 2,6
full fat soybean 6,9
extracted soybean meal 13,5
sugar beet 1,2
potato 0,7
pumpkin 0,8
14Fibre requirement of different animal species ()
young pigs (10-20 kg) 2,5
older pigs (70-110 kg) 3,5
broiler chick (0-3 hét) 2-3
broiler chick (5-6 hét) 3-4
laying hen 5
horse 12-16
rebbit 11-12
milking cow 17-23
15Effect of dietary fibre in the human nutrition
- requirement 30-40 g/day
- consumption 15-25 g/day
Consequences of fibre deficiency
- large bowel problems, diseases (constipation,
diverticuloses, colon or rectal cancer) - metabolic disorders (obesity, diabetes high blood
lipid parameters)