Feed intake and production in sheep fed diets high in sodium and potassium
David G. Masters A C , Allan J. Rintoul A , Robyn A. Dynes A , Kelly L. Pearce A B and Hayley C. Norman AA CSIRO Livestock Industries, Centre for Environment and Life Sciences and Cooperative Research Centre for Plant-based Management of Dryland Salinity, Private Bag 5, Wembley, WA 6913, Australia.
B Division of Veterinary and Biomedical Science, Murdoch University, Murdoch, WA 6150, Australia.
C Corresponding author. Email: David.Masters@csiro.au
Australian Journal of Agricultural Research 56(5) 427-434 https://doi.org/10.1071/AR04280
Submitted: 16 November 2004 Accepted: 7 March 2005 Published: 31 May 2005
Abstract
Salinity is a problem facing many crop and livestock producers in southern Australia. One management option is to revegetate with salt-tolerant plants suitable for animal production. These plants are often halophytic shrubs containing up to 30% ash, predominantly as sodium, potassium, or chloride.
This experiment examines the consequences of a high intake of sodium and potassium separately or together on feed intake, digestibility, liveweight change, and wool growth. Twelve groups of 6 weaner wethers were allocated to treatments according to a balanced 3 × 4 factorial design with 3 levels of added potassium (0, 0.38, and 0.77 mol/kg DM equivalent to 0, 15, and 30 g/kg DM) and 4 levels of added sodium (0, 0.87, 2.18, and 3.48 mol/kg DM, equivalent to 0, 20, 50, and 80 g/kg DM) as the chloride salts. The treatment diets were fed to sheep for 6 weeks.
Increasing sodium in the diet significantly decreased feed intake, digestibility, liveweight gain, and wool growth either as a main effect or through an interaction with potassium. Organic matter intake was reduced from 1.35 kg at the lowest levels of sodium and potassium to 0.67 kg at the highest levels. Comparing the same 2 groups, liveweight gain was reduced from 144 to 0 g/day, organic matter digestibility from 59.1% to 57.3%, and wool growth from 1.21 to 1.04 mg/cm2.day. The response surfaces indicate that production was depressed even at the lower levels of sodium, whereas high potassium depressed intake, digestibility, and liveweight gain at high levels of sodium only. The interaction between sodium and potassium was always negative at high levels of sodium, indicating that manipulation of the proportions of the 2 elements is unlikely to provide benefits for animal production when total salt levels are high. Although wool growth was depressed at high sodium and potassium, the efficiency of wool growth increased from 10.0 to 15.4 g/kg organic matter intake when the lowest and highest levels of the sodium and potassium were compared. This result may present significant opportunities for the use of saline land to grow fine wool.
Additional keywords: salt, salinity, wool growth, digestibility.
Acknowledgments
The authors acknowledge the support and assistance of Leah Wells (a CSIRO Summer Studentship recipient), Colin White, and Shimin Liu, and the technical support of Mike Carthew and Simone Martin.
Allden WG
(1979) Feed intake, diet composition and wool growth. ‘Physiological and environmental limitations to wool growth’. (Eds JL Black, PJ Reis)
pp. 61–78. (The University of New England Publishing Unit: Armidale, NSW)
Arieli A,
Naim E,
Benjamin RW, Pasternak D
(1989) The effect of feeding saltbush and sodium chloride on energy metabolism in sheep. Animal Production 49, 451–457.
Aslam Z,
Barrett-Lennard EG, Greenway H
(1988) Effects of external concentration of (K+ + Na+) and K+/Na+ on the growth and ion relations of Atriplex amnicola.
Journal of Plant Physiology 133, 228–234.
Baxter BP,
Brims MA, Teasdale DC
(1992) The Optical Fibre Diameter Analyser (OFDA): new technology for the wool industry. Wool Technology and Sheep Breeding 40, 131–134.
Carter RR, Grovum L
(1990) Factors affecting the voluntary intake of food by sheep. 5. The inhibitory effect of hypertonicity in the rumen. The British Journal of Nutrition 64, 285–299.
| PubMed |
Easton EG,
Hocking Edwards JE, White CL
(1998) The effect of adding salt to a canola meal supplement on wool growth in weaner sheep. Animal Production in Australia 22, 257–260.
Faichney, GJ ,
and
White, GA (1983).
Forbes, JM (1995).
Forbes JM, Barrio JP
(1992) Abdominal chemo- and mechano-sensitivity in ruminants and its role in the control of food intake. Experimental Physiology 77, 27–50.
| PubMed |
Harper ME, Willis JS, Patrick J
(1997) Sodium and chloride in nutrition. ‘Handbook of nutritionally essential mineral elements’. (Eds BL O’Dell, RA Sunde)
pp. 93–116. (Marcel Dekker, Inc.: New York)
Hemsley JA
(1975) Effect of high intake of sodium chloride on the utilisation of a protein concentrate by sheep. I Wool growth. Australian Journal of Agricultural Research 26, 709–714.
| Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |
Hemsley JA,
Hogan JP, Weston RH
(1975) Effect of high intake of sodium chloride on the utilisation of a protein concentrate by sheep. II Digestion and absorption of organic matter and electrolytes. Australian Journal of Agricultural Research 26, 715–727.
| Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |
Jackson HM,
Kromann RP, Ray EE
(1971) Energy retention in lambs as influenced by various levels of sodium and potassium in the rations. Journal of Animal Science 33, 872–877.
| PubMed |
Langlands JP, Wheeler JL
(1968) The dyebanding and tattooed patch procedures for estimating wool production and obtaining samples for the measurement of fibre diameter. Australian Journal of Experimental Agriculture and Animal Husbandry 8, 265–269.
| Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |
Lines EW, Peirce AW
(1931) The basal (standard) metabolism of the Australian merino sheep. Bulletin of the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research, Australia 55, 84.
Liu SL
(2002) Determination of 2H2O at very low enrichment by gas chromatography mass spectrometry for measuring body water space. Animal Production in Australia 24, 323.
Masters DG,
Mata G,
Liu SM, Peterson AD
(1998) Influence of liveweight, liveweight change, and diet on wool growth, staple strength, and fibre diameter in young sheep. Australian Journal of Agricultural Research 49, 269–277.
| Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |
McQuaker NR,
Brown DF, Kluckner PD
(1979) Digestion of environmental materials for analysis by Inductively Coupled Plasma-Atomic Emission Spectrometry. Analytical Chemistry 51, 1082–1084.
| Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |
Meyer AH,
Langhans W, Scharrer E
(1989) Vasopressin reduces food intake in goats. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Physiology and Cognate Medical Sciences 74, 465–473.
Meyer JH, Weir WC
(1954) The tolerance of sheep to high intakes of sodium chloride. Journal of Animal Science 13, 443–449.
Meyer JH,
Weir WC,
Ittner NR, Smith JD
(1955) The influence of high sodium chloride intakes by fattening sheep and cattle. Journal of Animal Science 14, 412–418.
Morcombe PW,
Young GE, Boase KA
(1996) Grazing a saltbush (Atriplex-Maireana) stand by Merino wethers to fill the ‘autumn feed-gap’ experienced in the Western Australian wheat belt. Australian Journal of Experimental Agriculture 36, 641–647.
| Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |
Moseley G, Jones DIH
(1974) The effect of sodium chloride supplementation of a sodium adequate hay on digestion, production and mineral nutrition in sheep. Journal of Agricultural Science, Cambridge 83, 37–42.
National Land and Water Resources Audit (2001).
Norman HC, Dynes RA, Masters DG
(2002) Nutritive value of plants growing on saline land. ‘Productive use and rehabilitation of saline land, 8th National Conference’. Fremantle, Australia.. (Promaco Conventions Pty Ltd: Perth, W. Aust.)
Panaretto BA
(1963) Body composition in vivo. III. The composition of living ruminants and its relation to the tritiated water spaces. Australian Journal of Agricultural Research 14, 944–952.
| Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |
Peirce AW
(1957) Studies on salt tolerance of sheep. 1. The tolerance of sheep for sodium chloride in the drinking water. Australian Journal of Agricultural Research 8, 711–722.
| Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |
Potter BJ
(1968) The influence of previous salt ingestion on the renal function of sheep subjected to intravenous hypertonic saline. Journal of Physiology 194, 435–455.
| PubMed |
Rossi R,
Del Prete E,
Rokitzky J, Scharrer E
(1998) Effects of a high NaCl diet on eating and drinking patterns in pygmy goats. Physiology and Behaviour 63, 601–604.
| Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |
Searle TW
(1970) Body composition in lambs and young sheep and its prediction in vivo from tritiated water space and body weight. Journal of Agriculture Science, Cambridge 74, 357–362.
Squires VR
(1993) Australian experiences with high salinity diets for sheep. ‘Towards the rational use of high salinity tolerant plants. Vol. 1. Deliberations about high salinity tolerant plants and ecosystems’. (Eds H Lieth, AA Al Masoom)
pp. 449–457. (Kluwer Academic Publishers: Dordrecht, The Netherlands)
Standing Committee on Agriculture (1990).
Sweeney RA, Rexroad PR
(1987) Comparison of LECO FP-228 ‘Nitrogen Determinator’ with AOAC copper catalyst kjeldahl method for crude protein. Journal - Association of Official Analytical Chemists 70, 1028–1032.
| PubMed |
Ternouth JH, Beattie AW
(1971) Studies of the food intake of sheep at a single meal. The British Journal of Nutrition 25, 153–164.
| PubMed |
Warren BE, Casson T
(1994) Sheep and saltbush—are they compatible? ‘Productive Use and Rehabilitation of Saline Lands, 3rd National Conference’. Echuca, Australia. (
:
)
Warren BE, Casson T, Ryall DH
(1994) Production from grazing sheep on revegetated saltland in Western Australia. ‘Halophytes as a resource for livestock and for rehabilitation of degraded lands’. (Eds VR Squires, AT Ayoub)
pp. 263–265. (Kluwer Academic Publishers: Dordrecht, The Netherlands)
Weinberger MH
(1997) Sodium, potassium, and blood pressure. American Journal of Hypertension 10, 46S–48S.
| PubMed |
White CL,
Masters DG,
Peter DW,
Purser DB,
Roe SP, Barnes MJ
(1992) A multi element supplement for grazing sheep. I. Intake, mineral status and production responses. Australian Journal of Agricultural Research 43, 795–808.
| Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |
Wilson AD
(1966a) The intake and excretion of sodium by sheep fed on species of Atriplex (saltbush) and Kochia (bluebush). Australian Journal of Agricultural Research 17, 155–163.
| Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |
Wilson AD
(1966b) The tolerance of sheep to sodium chloride in food or drinking water. Australian Journal of Agricultural Research 17, 503–514.
| Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |
Zall DM,
Fisher D, Garner MQ
(1956) Photometric determination of chlorides in water. Analytical Chemistry 28, 1665–1668.
| Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |