A. R. Egan
University of Melbourne
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Featured researches published by A. R. Egan.
Animal Feed Science and Technology | 2002
Peiqiang Yu; J.O. Goelema; B. J. Leury; S. Tamminga; A. R. Egan
Recently obtained information on structural and compositional effects of processing of legume seeds is reviewed, in relation to legume seed characteristics affecting digestive behavior and nutrient utilization. The emphasis is on (1) manipulation of digestive behavior by heat processing methods, particularly on protein and/or starch components of legume seeds, (2) prediction of changes of potential nutrient supply to ruminants from legume seeds after heat processing, using the newly developed DVE/OEB model, and (3) obtaining information on optimal processing conditions of legume seeds as intestinal protein source in term of protein DVE and OEB values (to achieve target values for potential high net absorbable protein in the small intestine while holding any N loss in the rumen to a low level), using the protein evaluation DVE/OEB model. The information described in this paper may give better insight in the mechanisms involved and the changes occurring upon processing of legume seeds. A focus of the review is on evaluation of the models and new approaches to establishment of a protein evaluation system that more accurately accounts for digestive processes in the ruminant on a quantitative basis.
Meat Science | 2001
Eric N. Ponnampalam; Graham R. Trout; Andrew J. Sinclair; A. R. Egan; B. J. Leury
A series of three experiments were conducted with second cross ([Merino×Border Leicester]×Poll Dorset) wether lambs to evaluate the effects of dietary treatments on manipulation of muscle long-chain (LC) omega-3 fatty acids (FA) on the color stability and oxidative stability of fresh and vacuum packaged lamb. At the end of 7-, 6- and 6-week experimental periods for experiments (Exp.) 1-3 respectively, lambs were slaughtered at a commercial abattoir. At 24 h post-mortem, muscle longissimus lumborum (LL) and longissimus thoracis (LT) were removed and evaluated for color and lipid oxidative stability under specified commercial storage and display condition. Of the dietary supplements used, fish meal and fish oil moderately (P<0.01) and markedly (P<0.001) increased muscle omega-3 FA content, while both protected canola seed (P<0.001) and protected sunflower meal protein significantly (P<0.02) increased muscle omega-6 FA content or ratio of omega-6/omega-3 of the longissimus muscle. In all experiments, the substantial increase (P<0.001) in muscle LC omega-3 and omega-6 FA had no consistent significant effect on color values (redness (a*), yellowness (b*) and lightness (L*)) for fresh and vacuum packaged lamb over a 6-day display period. Lipid oxidation, determined by the levels of thiobarbituric acid reactive substances (TBARS) indicated the enrichment of muscle polyunsaturated fatty acid (PUFA) levels in lambs did not produce significant differences resulting either from main treatment effects or for treatment×day×type interactions (where type was fresh and vacuum packaged). Present results demonstrated the color and lipid oxidative stability of lamb longissimus muscle during refrigerated display was not affected by enhanced levels of omega-3 and omega-6 FA due to dietary treatments.
Meat Science | 2002
Eric N. Ponnampalam; Andrew J. Sinclair; A. R. Egan; Greg R Ferrier; B. J. Leury
The effects of dietary manipulation of muscle long-chain omega-3 fatty acids (FA) on sensory properties of cooked meat in second cross ([Merino×Border Leicester]×Poll Dorset) wether lambs were evaluated. Lambs fed dietary supplements of fish meal (FM, Exp. 1) and fish oil (FO, Exp. 2) showed moderately (P<0.01) and markedly (P<0.001) increased muscle long-chain omega-3 FA content compared with those fed the basal diet of lucerne chaff and oat chaff. Protected canola seed (PCS, Exp. 1) significantly (P<0.001) increased omega-6 FA content of the longissimus muscle. In each of the 2 experiments (1 and 2), after being fed experimental diets for 6 weeks lambs were slaughtered at a commercial abattoir. At 24 h post-mortem (PM) the semitendinosus and biceps femoris muscles were removed from animals and stored at -20°C until evaluation of sensory properties using experienced panel members. The muscle samples were stored for 3 (Exp. 1) and 12 (Exp. 2) months then removed, thawed and cooked for sensory evaluation. The meat samples were cooked under standardized conditions in a convection microwave at 180°C (20-25 min) to an internal temperature of 75°C. Cooked samples were tested for flavour, aroma, juiciness and overall palatability. The significant increase in muscle long-chain omega-3 with FM (Exp. 1 and 2) and FO (Exp. 2) or omega-6 FA with PCS (Exp. 1) were not detrimental to sensory panel evaluations of flavour or aroma of cooked meat when compared with the basal diet. However, meat from FM (Exp. 1) had lower juiciness and FO (Exp. 2) had lower overall palatability. Protected sunflower meal protein with FO (Exp. 2) significantly lowered ratings for flavour, juiciness and overall palatability. Lamb meat with increased levels of long-chain omega-3 FA can be produced without altering the sensory quality (flavour or aroma) of the cooked meat.
Animal Production Science | 2005
Y. J. Williams; G. P. Walker; P. T. Doyle; A. R. Egan; C. R. Stockdale
An experiment was conducted in which cows in early lactation grazed Persian clover (Trifolium resupinatum L.) or perennial ryegrass (Lolium perenne L.)-dominant pastures at low or high pasture allowances in order to determine the effects of pasture type and level of feeding on rumen fermentation patterns. The hypotheses for grazing dairy cows were: (i) the consumption of Persian clover would result in a more rapid rate of degradation and less stable rumen fermentation patterns compared with perennial ryegrass; and (ii) the greater intake of cows grazing at high compared with low pasture allowances would also cause less stable rumen fermentation patterns. Stability of rumen fermentation refers to the level to which rumen fluid pH declines, especially for long periods of a day, indicating that the rumen is not coping with neutralising and/or removing acids. Cows grazing Persian clover had lower (P 0.05) of pasture allowance on the degradation rate of perennial ryegrass dry matter, but the higher allowance of Persian clover resulted in the highest (P<0.05) rate of degradation of dry matter compared with either ryegrass treatment or the low allowance of Persian clover. The effective dry matter degradability of Persian clover was greater (P<0.05) than that of perennial ryegrass, and the effective dry matter degradability of herbage in cows grazing at low allowances was greater (P<0.05) than at higher allowances. However, future research should consider neutral detergent fibre degradation in grazing dairy cows with low rumen fluid pH levels.
Journal of Dairy Science | 2009
W.J. Wales; E.S. Kolver; A. R. Egan; R. Roche
The effect of a grain-based concentrate supplement on fatty acid (FA) intake and concentration of milk FA in early lactation was investigated in grazing dairy cows that differed in their country of origin and in their estimated breeding value for milk yield. It was hypothesized that Holstein-Friesian cows of North American (NA) origin would produce milk lower in milk fat than those of New Zealand (NZ) origin, and that the difference would be associated with lower de novo synthesis of FA. In comparison, increasing the intake of concentrates should have the same effect on the FA composition of the milk from both strains. Fifty-four cows were randomly assigned in a factorial arrangement to treatments including 3 amounts of concentrate daily [0, 3, and 6 kg of dry matter (DM)/cow] and the 2 strains. The barley/steam-flaked corn concentrate contained 3.5% DM FA, with C18:2, C16:0, and C18:1 contributing 48, 18, and 16% of the total FA. The pasture consumed by the cows contained 4.6% DM FA with C18:3, C16:0, and C18:1 contributing 51, 10, and 10% of the FA, respectively. Pasture DM intake decreased linearly with supplementation, but total DM intake was not different between concentrate or strain treatments, averaging 16.2 kg of DM/cow, with cows consuming 720 g of total FA/d. Cows of the NA strain had lesser concentrations of milk fat compared with NZ cows (3.58 vs. 3.95%). Milk fat from the NA cows had lesser concentrations of C6:0, C8:0, C10:0, C12:0, C14:0, and C16:0, and greater concentrations of cis-9 C18:1, C18:2, and cis-9, trans-11 C18:2, than NZ cows. These changes indicated that in milk from NA cows had a lesser concentration of de novo synthesized FA and a greater concentration of FA of dietary origin. Milk fat concentration was not affected by concentrate supplementation. Increasing concentrate intake resulted in linear increases in the concentrations of C10:0, C12:0, C14:0, and C18:2 FA in milk fat, and a linear decrease in the concentration of C4:0 FA. The combination of NA cows fed pasture alone resulted in a FA composition of milk that was potentially most beneficial from a human health perspective; however, this would need to be balanced against other aspects of the productivity of these animals.
Neuroendocrinology | 2002
Johannes D. Veldhuis; Terry P. Fletcher; Kathryn L. Gatford; A. R. Egan; Iain J. Clarke
Somatostatin (SRIH) release into hypophyseal portal blood varies reciprocally with growth hormone (GH) pulse generation in the male rat. However, few studies have directly evaluated this relationship in the female of any species. To address this issue, we carried out intensive (5 min) and extended (240 min) simultaneous monitoring of hypophyseal portal SRIH and internal jugular GH secretion in 7 unanesthetized ewes. Bihormonal synchrony was assessed by three statistically independent but complementary analyses: (i) cross-approximate entropy (X-ApEn) analysis to appraise the conditional regularity of SRIH/GH release patterns; (ii) cross-correlation analysis of paired sample SRIH and GH release rates, and (iii) probability analysis of random versus nonrandom SRIH and GH discrete pulse concordance. From a one-variable perspective, ApEn analysis documented consistently more irregular patterns of SRIH than GH release (94 ± 4.3 and 72 ± 8.1%, respectively, of the mean irregularity of 1,000 individual random-shuffled cognate series, p = 0.034). From a two-variable perspective, X-ApEn analysis revealed a nearly mean random relationship between SRIH and GH release patterns (group mean ± SEM, 94 ± 4.5% of the mean asynchrony of 1,000 randomly shuffled SRIH/GH pairs). Cross-correlation analysis disclosed highly variable linkages between SRIH and GH secretion; viz, negative cross-correlations in 5 sheep, positive relationships in 4, and both positive and negative SRIH/GH associations in 2 animals, wherein changes in SRIH secretion either preceded or followed those of GH. Peak detection by model-free cluster analysis quantified a total of 28 SRIH and 31 GH release episodes. Corresponding interpulse intervals (min) were comparable (37 ± 4 (SRIH) and 43 ± 12 (GH)), but the mean fractional (%) amplitude of SRIH peaks was 3.5-fold lower (60 ± 10%) than that for GH (225 ± 50%) (p = 0.024). Pulse-concordance probability testing showed that discrete peaks of SRIH and GH secretion coincided only 33% of the time, although this value exceeded chance expectation (p < 10–4). In summary, the present analysis applies intensive (5 min) and extended (240 min) simultaneous sampling of hypophyseal-portal and jugular venous blood to quantitate the degree of coordinate SRIH and GH secretion in the unanesthetized ovariectomized ewe. Thereby, we unmask highly irregular SRIH release patterns, and nearly random SRIH and GH associations. We conclude that, to the extent that in vivo sampling reflects physiological SRIH/somatotrope activity, the female sheep maintains complex time-varying interactions between SRIH and GH release.
Meat Science | 2003
Eric N. Ponnampalam; Brenton J. Hosking; A. R. Egan
An experiment was conducted to examine the effects of infrequently fed (twice/week) protein supplements on rate of carcass components gain, carcass traits and tenderness of meat in lambs. Forty-three Dorset Horn×Merino wether lambs (aged 4 months) were assigned by stratified randomization (live weight basis) to five dietary treatments to compare the results with lambs fed very low quality (5.1 MJME/day) roughage diet. Lambs on control diet (BAS; treatment 1) and all other dietary treatment groups were offered ad libitum amounts of a mixed roughage diet (oat hay:lucerne hay) at the ratio of 85:15 throughout the 10-week experimental study. Supplements of barley grain with added urea and sulphate (USB, 226 g DM/day; treatment 2); lupins (LUP, 231 g DM/day; treatment 3); cottonseed meal (CSM, 152 g DM/day; treatment 4); fish meal (FM, 97 g DM/day; treatment 5) were offered at isonitrogenous amounts. Final live weight (FLW) and empty body weight (EBW) were greater (P<0.01) with FM, LUP, USB and CSM when compared with BAS. Rates of gain of carcass components observed during the experimental period resulted in lower carcass fatness (P<0.05) and greater muscle content (P<0.01) with FM; and higher (P<0.05) level of fat and muscle in the carcass with LUP compared to those on BAS diet. Other diets (USB and CSM) had less marked effects, but higher rate of daily fat gain in the carcass with LUP and CSM was indicated by greater carcass fat depth (P<0.05; the total tissue depth of muscle and fat at the twelfth rib, 110 mm from the midline; GR) and content of intramuscular fat (P<0.05), respectively. Energy gained as fat in the carcass was lowest with FM (P<0.05), highest with BAS and intermediate with all other treatments. The increase in carcass leanness and reduction in fatness with FM and USB compared to BAS and other treatments affected neither (P>0.1) meat tenderness (Warner-Bratzler shear force) nor sarcomere length of longissimus thoracis muscle. Feeding small amounts of protein supplements to lambs on very low quality forage diets during dry seasons may be a viable path to improve the carcass weight and leanness in lambs without changing the meat tenderness.
Animal Production Science | 2005
Y. J. Williams; P. T. Doyle; A. R. Egan; C. R. Stockdale
An experiment was conducted to investigate the hypothesis that increasing the intake of Persian clover (Trifolium resupinatum L.) would decrease rumen fluid pH and the rate of loss of neutral detergent fibre from nylon bags. It was further hypothesised that the reduction in the rate of disappearance of neutral detergent fibre with increased intake would be less in highly digestible clover than in highly digestible ryegrass or pasture hay. Sixteen rumen fistulated cows, in late lactation, were used in a completely randomised, split-plot design for 33 days. There were 4 pasture allowance treatments (9, 16, 32 and 53 kg dry matter (DM)/cow.day of Persian clover) with 4 cows per treatment. Cows grazed in individual plots, pasture intakes were measured, and rumen fluid and in sacco measurements were undertaken. Pasture DM intake increased asymptotically as pasture allowance increased from 9 to 53 kg DM. Cows grazing at the 9 kg pasture allowance spent less time grazing than cows at higher allowances (294 v. 368, 421 and 414 min, P 0.05) of pasture allowance on time spent ruminating, which averaged 236 min. Estimated rates of intake increased (P 0.05). There were no differences (P>0.05) in total rumen contents (75.6 kg; s.e.d. = 6.95), or DM (7.3 kg; s.e.d. = 0.73) and neutral detergent fibre (2.7 kg; s.e.d. = 0.32) pools, of cows grazing at different allowances. Offering cows increasing allowances of Persian clover pasture reduced rumen digesta retention times, as rumen pool sizes did not change. Average daily pH fell with increasing allowance due to differences in daily intake and pH patterns, and increasing pasture allowance decreased the rate of disappearance of neutral detergent fibre. It is suggested that increased outflow rates, driven by differences in daily pH patterns and changes in substrate composition, were responsible for the decline in disappearance of neutral detergent fibre from nylon bags, but the effects of the factors cannot be separated.
Animal Production Science | 2005
Y. J. Williams; W.J. Wales; P. T. Doyle; A. R. Egan; C. R. Stockdale
Cows grazing highly digestible pasture in early spring can have very low rumen fluid pH that can negatively impact on the efficiency of microbial digestion. In this experiment, cows in early lactation grazed perennial ryegrass (Lolium perenne L.)-based pasture alone at low or high allowances, or at a low allowance supplemented with either a cereal grain pellet, a chopped hay cube or a cube containing cereal grain and chopped hay to determine the effects of the addition of neutral detergent fibre as hay on chewing behaviour and stability of rumen fermentation. The hypotheses tested were that: (i) supplementing high digestibility ryegrass pasture with pelleted cereal grain would increase the proportion of the day that the pH of rumen fluid was below 6.0 and would decrease the rate of degradation of neutral detergent fibre in pasture and hay; and (ii) the inclusion of chopped hay with the cereal grain supplement in cubes would reduce the proportion of the day that the rumen fluid pH was below 6.0 and restore the rate of degradation of neutral detergent fibre in pasture and hay to that in unsupplemented cows. Rumen fluid pH was highest (P 0.05) difference between those fed pasture only or cereal grain pellets. The introduction of grain, with or without hay, did not substantially alter the pattern or magnitude of changes in rumen fluid pH, but did reduce (P 0.05) effects of dietary treatment on time spent grazing or on rate of biting while grazing. Cows in treatments receiving grain supplements (532 min) and those in the high pasture allowance treatment (566 min) spent more (P<0.05) time ruminating than those in the low pasture allowance (415 min) and chopped hay cube (465 min) treatments. The relative contributions of low pH and of starch to the reduction in rates of dry matter and neutral detergent fibre degradation in the rumen cannot be determined from this experiment, however, it is likely that both factors contribute to a relative increase in the metabolic activity of non-cellulolytic microorganisms.
Journal of Dairy Science | 2009
W.J. Wales; E.S. Kolver; A. R. Egan
The objective of this study was to quantify the optimal inclusion rate of grain required to maximize nutrient digestion of a diet based on highly digestible pasture. It was hypothesized that maximum digestion would occur at a rate of grain inclusion that resulted in a culture pH of 6.0, reflecting the pH below which fiber digestion would be expected to be compromised. Four dual-flow continuous culture fermenters were used to establish the effects on digestion of replacing freeze-dried, highly digestible ryegrass with 0, 15, 30, and 45% of dry matter as 60% barley, 35% steam-flaked corn, and 5% molasses mix. The respective composite diets were fed twice daily to mimic intake patterns observed in dairy cows offered supplements during milking and offered half their daily allowance of pasture after each milking. Digesta samples were collected during the last 3 d of each of four 9-d experimental periods. Average daily culture pH decreased linearly as proportion of cereal grain in the diet increased, with average daily pH ranging from 6.29 to 5.74. Concentrations of neutral detergent fiber and total fatty acids decreased linearly with increasing proportion of cereal grain in the diet. Digestion of organic matter (OM) was maximized at an interpolated value of 24% grain inclusion and culture pH of 6.0, but the difference in the OM digestibility over the range of grain treatments from 0 to 45% was small (3 percentage units) despite pH changes over a range of 6.3 to 5.7. The relatively small change in OM digestibility was explained by reduced fiber and crude protein digestibilities being balanced by an increased digestion of nonstructural carbohydrate. Although different relationships between ruminal pH and digestibility appear to exist when cows are fed pasture alone compared with a total mixed ration, when starch supplements are included in pasture diets, the relationships associated with feeding a total mixed ration may then be more likely to apply.