Repository logoCyprus University of Technology
Log In(current)
Ελληνικά
English
  1. Home
  2. Cyprus University of Technology (Research Output)
  3. Άρθρα/Articles
  4. Feeding olive cake silage up to 20% of DM intake in sheep improves lipid quality and health-related indices of milk and ovine halloumi cheese
  • Details

Feeding olive cake silage up to 20% of DM intake in sheep improves lipid quality and health-related indices of milk and ovine halloumi cheese

Journal
Tropical Animal Health and Production
Date Issued
June 2021
Author(s)
Symeou, Simoni  
Miltiadou, Despoina  
Constantinou, Constantina  
Papademas, Photis  
Tzamaloukas, Ouranios  
DOI
10.1007/s11250-021-02674-7
Abstract
This study aimed to evaluate the use of a by-product, olive cake silage (OCS), as a forage replacement in sheep diets for the improvement of fatty acid (FA) content of milk and thus, the lipids of the ovine halloumi cheese produced. Sixty second-parity purebred Chios ewes in mid-lactation were assigned to three diet treatments (2 lots of 10 animals per treatment) receiving 0%, 10%, and 20% of OCS on dry matter basis for 3 weeks (treatments S0, S10, and S20, respectively). Halloumi cheese was manufactured from fresh raw milk of ewes fed the three different diets. Inclusion of OCS in the diets increased linearly the concentration in milk of unsaturated FA up to 20%, monounsaturated FA up to 23%, polyunsaturated FA up to 11%, rumenic acid (CLA cis-9, trans-11) up to 61%, and consequently reduced the atherogenicity and thrombogenicity milk indices by 31% and 27%, for the S10 and S20 treatments, respectively, compared with the control treatment. Moreover, these differences were carried over to the lipid profile of ovine halloumi cheese showing, on average, more than 25% increase of unsaturated, polyunsaturated, and monounsaturated FA, with particularly enhanced oleic and rumenic acid content. These changes resulted in reduced atherogenicity by 29% and 45% and thrombogenicity by 23% and 24% of ovine halloumi cheese made from milk of S10 and S20 diets, respectively. Milk yield, milk fat, or protein content was not affected by S10 or S20 feeding treatments compared to control. Overall, the applied ensiling method of olive cake produces a by-product that can be included as a forage replacement up to 20% of DM intake in Chios sheep without adversely affecting the lactating performance. Furthermore, the present study showed that such substitution improves the lipid quality of milk and related halloumi cheese enriching these ovine dairy products with beneficial to human health fatty acids.
Subjects

Chios sheep

Conjugated linoleic a...

Ensiled olive cake

Fatty acids

File(s)
Thumbnail Image
Name

Symeou2021_Article_FeedingOliveCakeSilageUpTo20Of.pdf

Size

264.82 KB

Format

Adobe PDF

Checksum (MD5)

cf3f10a23ff0ef369185585b6d199be3

Explore by
  • Collections
  • Research Outputs
  • Researchers
  • Faculty & Departments
  • Theses
  • Patents
  • Projects
  • Journals
  • Conferences
Useful Links
  • Researcher Portfolio Guide
  • Researcher Profile
  • Create an ORCID ID
  • CUT Open Access Author Fund
  • ETDS Guide
Copyright Policies

Use Sherpa/Romeo to find publisher copyright policies

Go
Go
  • SPARC Author Addendum Engine
  • National Open Access Policy in Cyprus
Deposit your work to Ktisis
  • Self-archiving. Please sign in to Ktisis.
  • Email your work to:
    library.dspace@cut.ac.cy
  • Contact your subject librarian

Member of

OpenAIREre3dataOpenDOARCOREDART
Cyprus University of Technology
Library and
Information
Services

Copyright © 2022 - Library and Information Services Feedback - Built with DSpace-CRIS - 4Science

  • Accessibility settings
  • Privacy policy
  • End User Agreement
COAR NotifyCOAR Notify