Utilization of endogenous and dietary urea in the large intestine of the mature horse

  • Martin R
  • McMeniman N
  • Norton B
  • et al.
20Citations
Citations of this article
12Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

The dynamics of N metabolism in mature horses were investigated when they were fed on a low-N diet or the same diet supplemented with sufficient urea or soyabean meal to meet their theoretical N requirements. There were no differences in DM, organic matter or neutral-detergent-fibre digestibilities for the three diets. N digestibilities and digestible-N intakes were similar for the urea- and soyabean-supplemented diets and very low for the low-N diet. For all three diets plasma urea was degraded in the digestive tract to NH 3 which was utilized by the bacterial population as a N source. NH 3 was absorbed from the large intestine into the blood and converted to urea. NH 3 was also incorporated into plasma proteins. The horses fed on the low-N diet degraded a greater proportion of endogenous urea in the digestive tract than did horses fed on the urea- or soyabean-supplemented diets. However, the horses fed on the urea diet had the highest degradation rate of urea. The quantity of urea degraded in the digestive tract of horses fed on the urea-supplemented and the low-N diets could not compensate for a lack of dietary crude protein in these diets. The horses were in a negative N balance when fed on the low-N and urea-supplemented diets and a positive N balance when fed on the soyabean-supplemented diet. Dietary urea supplementation did not benefit the horses.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Martin, R. G., McMeniman, N. P., Norton, B. W., & Dowsett, K. F. (1996). Utilization of endogenous and dietary urea in the large intestine of the mature horse. British Journal of Nutrition, 76(3), 373–386. https://doi.org/10.1079/bjn19960043

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free