Reducing enteric methane emission in dairy goats: impact of dietary inclusions of quebracho tannin extract on ruminal microbiota
Paola Cremonesi, Marco Severgnini, Marco Battelli, Valentina Monistero, Martina Penati, Alessia Libera Gazzonis, Bianca Castiglioni, Luca Rapetti, Maria Teresa Manfredi, Maria Filippa Addis

TL;DR
This study shows that adding quebracho tannin extract to dairy goat diets changes the rumen microbiota, reduces methane emissions, and affects digestion.
Contribution
The study identifies specific microbial shifts in dairy goats caused by dietary tannins and links them to reduced methane and altered digestion.
Findings
Dietary quebracho tannin extract reduced methane emissions and altered ruminal microbiota diversity.
Tannin inclusion increased propionate production and decreased isobutyrate and isovalerate concentrations.
Methanobrevibacter, a key methane producer, was reduced by tannin diets.
Abstract
Condensed tannins (CT) influence ruminal microbiota, feed digestibility, and methane emissions, yet their effects in goats are poorly understood. This study evaluated the impact of dietary quebracho CT extract at 0%, 2%, 4%, or 6% of dry matter on the composition of the dairy goat ruminal microbiota with a two-times repeated 4 × 4 Latin square design. Bacterial, archaeal, fungal, and protozoan communities were analyzed at the end of each feeding period for relative abundance changes, and their relationship to methane production, nutrient digestibility and feed efficiency were also assessed. Increasing CT levels reduced alpha- and beta-diversity, with the 6% CT diet showing the most pronounced decline. CT inclusion induced phylum-level shifts in fiber-degrading microbes, including inversion of the Firmicutes to Bacteroidota ratio. Prevotellaceae and Succiniclasticum, tolerant to CT,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRuminant Nutrition and Digestive Physiology · Nuts composition and effects
