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Energy balance – ch. 10
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Energy The ability to do work Quantitatively the most important nutrient in the diet Derived from the oxidation of organic molecules – Protein, carbs, fats
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Energy in the body Stored in the body as fat Transferred in the body in the bonds of ATP Examples of energy transfers: – Chemical to heat – Chemical to mechanical – Chemical to electrical
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Energy transfers in the body are never 100% efficient! Heat is always being lost!
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Measuring dietary energy Calories (cal) – Energy to heat 1 g of water from 14.5° to 15.5° C – Kilocalorie (Kcal or Cal) = 1000 cal – Megacalorie (Mcal) = 1 therm = 1000 Kcal Most other countries use joules
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GE DE ME NE
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Gross energy (GE) Total amount of heat resulting from complete oxidation of a feedstuff – burning it Bomb calorimeter No distinguishing available from nonavailable Human food labels in GE
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Absorption / digestibility Food Animals are not 100% efficient! Food Body Loses Microbes
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Digestible energy (DE) GE – fecal energy = DE Eliminates that amount of energy the animal did not get to absorb Single largest loss of nutrient in feces – waste Apparent is not accurate – Try to account for endogenous losses with fasting measurements, parenteral feeding, 100% used diet
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Metabolizable energy (ME) DE – urine - gases of digestion = ME Ruminants - large energy loss through gases – Mostly methane, some others Nonruminants have some gases of digestion (fermentation), but they are normally ignored
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Corrections for N N excreted accounts of energy used to catabolize protein ME of diet can decrease as N content increases Can correct ME for N in diet – Done with poultry
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Net energy (NE) ME – heat increment – heat of fermentation = NE Energy truly available for maintenance, growth, & production HI & HF can heat animals like other mechanisms – Useful in cold weather – Detrimental in hot weather – energy used to dissipate heat
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Heat increment (HI) AKA: specific dynamic effect Heat produced by digestion & metabolism of nutrients – Inefficient capture of energy from oxidation – Oxidation not coupled to energy capture – Work done to excrete waste products – Increased work by the GI tract, respiratory, & circulatory systems from digestion & metabolism
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Increased metabolism rate after eating – Liver accounts for most HI HI changes with situation – Increases as FI increases – Increases when accretion & utilization is limited by other nutrients (e.g. AA’s, minerals) Not the same as total heat production – Animals produce heat when fed or fasting
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Heat of fermentation (HF) Heat from microbial metabolism – Fermentation, growth Hard to estimate
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Basal metabolism Condition when the minimum amount of energy is needed to sustain the body – Postabsorptive state HI and HF do not affect measurement – Muscular repose – Thermoneutral environment Circulation, respiration, secretions, muscle tonus, chemical & electrical gradients, tissue repair and maintenance
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Factors affecting Basal Metabolism – Age: heat production drops through most of life – Neuroendocrine factors: hormones and sex – Species and breed – Adaptation to fasting – Muscle training – Mental effort
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Maintenance Condition when a nonproductive animal neither gains nor loses energy reserves Factors affecting maintenance: – Basal metabolism – Any energy needed to perform daily tasks – Environmental factors
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Most maintenance energy for ATP Maintenance is largest energy cost Maintenance requirement can be estimated by metabolic BW Typically: Metabolic BW = BW 0.67 to 0.75
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Environmental expenditures Energy needed to conserve or dissipate heat Homeotherms produce energy to maintain body temperature Thermoneutral zone: temperatures where little energy is needed to maintain body temp
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Heat production related to: – Profile – Size / surface area – Exposure to environment Skin, wool, blood vessels dilating or constricting Acclimatization: adaptive changes to environment – behavioral and physiological – Easier for animals to warm up than cool down
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Energy efficiency Gross energy vs. other measure of energy per unit of production Amount of energy in that gain – Fat vs. protein – Fat - more energy stored – Protein - more energy for deposition & maintenance
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Efficiency: maintenance > milk/repro > growth HI and HF can help with maintenance Systems with NE m, NE g, NE l
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Nutrient requirements & energy Appetite is largely a reflection of energy needs Energy density & FI inversely related – Gut fill may limit FI at very low densities 2 ways to handle this fact – Base requirements at a set energy density e.g. standard diet of 3200 kcal ME / kg feed – Base requirements per unit energy e.g. gram Lys / kcal ME
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Total digestible nutrients (TDN) Similar to DE Calculation based on feed analysis to estimate energy value of feed
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Measuring heat production Evaporation, heat from skin, excretion, respiration Because of previous measurement trials, lots of energy values for different feedstuff are calculated by equations
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Comparative slaughter – Slaughter animals before and after trial to calculate the amount of energy gained (retained energy; RE) during the trial period Direct calorimeters – trap animals and measure heat and humidity coming off of them Indirect calorimeters – measure gases (CH 4, CO 2, O 2 ) in & out and of animal along with excretions (N) to estimate oxidation
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C-N balance – – Based on most energy is trapped as protein & fat with little carbohydrate in the body – Frequently used in conjunction with calorimetry – Measure C and N in and out of body feed, feces, urine, gases – Protein is 16% N & 51.2% C on avg. – Calculate amount of N & C stored as protein & fat – Calculate energy accretion from protein & fat accretion
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