Effect of S. cerevisiae strain KA500 supplementation on feed performance, feed efficiency, and digestion ability in feedlot buffaloes
Maiara dos Santos Ferreira, Welligton Conceição da Silva, Ancelmo Rodrigues Cunha, Ercvania Rodrigues Costa, Ícaro dos Santos Cabral, Salatiel Ribeiro Dias, Ronaldo Francisco de Lima

TL;DR
This study evaluated the impact of adding a specific yeast strain to buffalo feed and found no significant improvement in digestion or performance.
Contribution
The study provides new empirical evidence on the effects of S. cerevisiae strain KA500 in feedlot buffaloes.
Findings
Yeast supplementation reduced dry matter intake and live weight yield in buffaloes.
Digestibility of dry matter and organic matter decreased with yeast supplementation.
No significant improvement in weight gain, feed efficiency, or carcass yield was observed.
Abstract
Live yeasts have favorable characteristics for use in animal feed, and may become a beneficial tool to improve digestive efficiency in buffaloes (Bubalus bubalis). The productive performance, feed efficiency, and digestion ability of buffaloes fed diets supplemented with yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae strain KA500) were evaluated. Eighteen male Murrah buffaloes, with initial weight 250 ± 31 kg (mean ± standard deviation), and aged approximately 12 months, were randomly assigned to one of two treatments. The treatments included experimental feed containing 10 g of the live yeast capable of forming 2 × 1010 colony forming units (CFU) and control (feed with no added yeast). The daily weight gain tended to be lower (p = 0.07) in buffaloes supplemented with yeast. There was a reduction in daily dry matter intake (DMI) and in % yield of live weight in buffaloes supplemented with yeast. There…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRuminant Nutrition and Digestive Physiology · Animal Nutrition and Physiology · Genetic and phenotypic traits in livestock
