Zobrazeno 1 - 7
of 7
pro vyhledávání: '"F. D. D. Hovell"'
Publikováno v:
Journal of Animal Science. 81:2609-2616
Three sheep fitted with a ruminal cannula and an abomasal catheter were used to study water kinetics and absorption of VFA infused continuously into the rumen. The effects of changing VFA concentrations in the rumen by shifting VFA infusion rates wer
Publikováno v:
The Journal of Nutrition. 122:2226-2232
Endogenous allantoin derives from the breakdown of tissue nucleic acids. This study examined the effect of changes in protein supply on endogenous allantoin excretion by sheep. The animals were nourished by infusions of volatile fatty acids into the
Publikováno v:
Journal of Endocrinology. 130:53-61
Interactions between protein supply and the anabolic response to exogenous bovine (b) GH have been examined in two experiments using 28–35 kg lambs sustained entirely by intragastric infusion of volatile fatty acids (700 kJ/kg W0·75 per day) into
Publikováno v:
Experimental physiology. 76(1)
The recovery in urine of an intrajugular infusion of physiological amounts of allantoin was measured in four sheep nourished by an intragastric infusion of volatile fatty acids and casein (to eliminate rumen fermentation). The recovery was 72% (S.E.M
Publikováno v:
The British journal of nutrition. 63(2)
The saliva of sheep was shown to contain significant concentrations of uric acid (16 (sd) 4.5) μmol/l) and allantoin (120 (sd 16.4) μmol/l), sufficient to recycle purine derivatives equivalent to about 0.10 of the normal urinary excretion. When all
Publikováno v:
British Journal of Nutrition. 52:561-574
1. In a comparative-slaughter experiment, individually rationed wether lambs initially of 42 kg were given 235, 362 or 456 kJ metabolizable energy (ME)/kg live weight (LW)0.75 per d as sodium hydroxide-treated barley straw with urea (six lambs per tr
Publikováno v:
British Journal of Nutrition. 62:285-296
Seven measurements of the effect of clenbuterol on basal nitrogen excretion (UNE), and protein turnover were made in six female sheep. The sheep were sustained by the intraruminal infusion of energy as volatile fatty acids to provide maintenance, but