Harm and Benefit of Plant and Fungal Secondary Metabolites in Food Animal Production

Front Cover
Michael D. Flythe, Glen Eris Aiken, Arthur Louis Goetsch
Frontiers Media SA, Jun 21, 2018
Livestock species are either herbivores or omnivores that are maintained largely on plant-based diets. We have long appreciated the importance of understanding dietary plants from both nutritional and agronomic perspectives. However, it is increasingly clear that the fungi, bacteria and other microorganisms that live in the plants and animals are also significant factors in the ecology of agricultural animals. Many of the effects exerted on animals by dietary plants are attributable to secondary metabolites produced by the plants themselves or commensal microorganisms. Some fungal and plant secondary metabolites have multiple biological effects. We must be careful not to categorize a plant as strictly beneficial or harmful. Furthermore, we must be careful not to categorize even a particular plant or fungal compound as strictly beneficial or harmful. Rather, the harm or benefit of secondary metabolites are often dependent on the metabolic status of the animal, the interaction with other dietary factors including other secondary metabolites, and the dose received through the diet. This collection examines a range of agriculturally important plant and fungal products including essential oils, alkaloids, isoflavones and nitrates.
 

Contents

Harm and Benefit of Plant and Fungal Secondary Metabolites in Food Animal Production
4
Modulation of Rumen Fermentation and Potential As an Alternative Growth Promoter
6
Ruminal Fermentation of AntiMethanogenic Nitrate and NitroContaining Forages In Vitro
20
Mitigation of Ergot Vasoconstriction by Clover Isoflavones in Goats Capra hircus
29
Impacts of Cereal Ergot in Food Animal Production
39
A Review of the Disease and the Pathogen Rhizoctonia leguminicola
52
SummerLong Grazing of High vs Low Endophyte Neotyphodium coenophialumInfected Tall Fescue by Growing Beef Steers Results in Distinct Tem...
61
Interaction of isoflavones and endophyteinfected tall fescue seed extract on vasoactivity of bovine mesenteric vasculature
74
Potential of plant essential oils and their components in animal agriculture in vitro studies on antibacterial mode of action
84
The effects of steroid implant and dietary soybean hulls on estrogenic activity of sera of steers grazing toxic endophyteinfected tall fescue pasture
92
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