Login / Signup

Pre-Partum Supplementation with Polyunsaturated Fatty Acids on Colostrum Characteristics and Lamb Immunity and Behavior after a Mild Post-Weaning Aversive Handling Period.

Xavier AverósItsasne Granado-TajadaJosune ArranzIgnacia Beltrán de HerediaLaura GonzálezRoberto RuizAser Garcia-RodriguezRaquel Atxaerandio
Published in: Animals : an open access journal from MDPI (2022)
We studied the effect of pre-natal supplementation with n-3 α-linolenic acid (ALA) combined with a tannin-rich forage on colostrum composition and immunological quality and whether these changes had advantageous effects on lambs' survival and stress reaction to a post-weaning stressor. Forty-eight Latxa ewes were fed during the last five weeks of pregnancy with two experimental diets: a control diet based on a neutral concentrate and forage (tall fescue hay; CO-FES), and a supplemented diet based on polyunsaturated (PUFA)-rich concentrate and tanniferous forage (sainfoin; ALA-SAIN). After parturition, twenty ewes had their blood and colostrum sampled, and their lambs were monitored until post-weaning. Lambs were afterwards subjected to (i) an aversive handling period (AHP) followed by a behavioral assessment and (ii) inflammatory and lymphocyte proliferation challenge. Feeding ALA-SAIN resulted in changes in colostrum fatty acid composition, specifically higher α-linoleic acid ( p < 0.001), conjugate linoleic acid ( p = 0.005), vaccenic acid ( p = 0.006) and long-chain n-3 PUFA ( p = 0.004). Pre-partum nutrition did not affect lamb immunoglobulin (Ig) G apparent efficacy absorption, but circulating IgG tended to be higher ( p = 0.054) in ALA-SAIN lambs. ALA-SAIN lambs interacted more frequently with other lambs ( p = 0.002), whereas ALA-SAIN females spent more time closer to other lambs ( p < 0.001). Plasma cortisol was higher ( p = 0.047) and plasma interleukin (IL)-2 lower ( p = 0.003) in CO-FES lambs. This research highlights the importance of prenatal nutrition on the immune system stimulation and lambs' behavior as a strategy to improve lambs' health and welfare during early life.
Keyphrases