Effects of walnut green hsuk on the quality, bacterial community diversity and in vitro rumen digestion characteristics of whole-plant corn silage
Naibi Abulaiti, Fangxia Wang, Aibibula Yimamu

TL;DR
Adding walnut green husk to corn silage improves its quality and digestion by changing the bacterial community and fermentation characteristics.
Contribution
This study demonstrates the functional use of walnut green husk to enhance silage quality through microbial shifts and improved digestibility.
Findings
WGH addition increased dry matter and protein content while reducing harmful fermentation products like acetic acid and ammonia.
WGH enriched beneficial lactic acid bacteria and improved aerobic stability of the silage.
A WGH inclusion rate of 30 g/kg was found to be optimal for fermentation and digestibility in in vitro rumen tests.
Abstract
This experiment aimed to investigate the effects of adding walnut green husk (WGH) on the quality of whole-plant corn silage, bacterial community diversity, and in vitro rumen fermentation characteristics. The silage was prepared using whole-plant corn (Qidan 828) at the milk-ripening stage and walnut green husk (WGH, Xinwen 185) as raw materials. Four treatments were established: CK (100% whole-plant corn), A1, A2, and A3, with WGH added at rates of 15, 30, and 45 g per kg of fresh matter, respectively. Each treatment was ensiled in laboratory-scale silos for 60 days under dark and anaerobic conditions at 16 °C−22 °C, with three replicates per group. The results indicated that WGH supplementation significantly elevated the DM and CP content and concurrently lowered the levels of acetic acid, propionic acid, and NH3-N (P < 0.05). Consequently, it increased the lactic acid bacteria…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRuminant Nutrition and Digestive Physiology · Milk Quality and Mastitis in Dairy Cows · Selenium in Biological Systems
