Artículos de revistas
A kinetic model of phosphorus metabolism in growing goats
Fecha
2000-10-01Registro en:
Journal of Animal Science, v. 78, n. 10, p. 2706-2712, 2000.
0021-8812
2-s2.0-0034295015
2-s2.0-0034295015.pdf
Autor
Ctro. de Ener. Nucl. Na Agricultura
University of Reading
Camp. Universitário de Socopo
Univ. Federal Rural de Pernambuco
Universidade Estadual Paulista (Unesp)
Institución
Resumen
The effect of increasing phosphorus (P) intake on P utilization was investigated in balance experiments using 12 Saanen goats, 4 to 5 mo of age and weighing 20 to 30 kg. The goats were given similar diets with various concentrations of P, and 32P was injected to trace the movement of P in the body. A P metabolism model with four pools was developed to compute P exchanges in the system. The results showed that P absorption, bone resorption, and excretion of urinary P and endogenous and fecal P all play a part in the homeostatic control of P. Endogenous fecal output was positively correlated to P intake (P < .01). Bone resorption of P was not influenced by intake of P, and P recycling from tissues to the blood pool was lesser for low P intake. Endogenous P loss occurred even in animals fed an inadequate P diet, resulting in a negative P balance. The extrapolated minimum endogenous loss in feces was .067 g of P/d. The minimum P intake for maintenance in Saanen goats was calculated to be .61 g of P/ d or .055 g of P/(kg.75·d) at 25 kg BW. Model outputs indicate greater P flow from the blood pool to the gut and vice versa as P intake increased. Intake of P did not significantly affect P flow from bone and soft tissue to blood. The kinetic model and regressions could be used to estimate P requirement and the fate of P in goats and could also be extrapolated to both sheep and cattle.