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Fermentative profile and lactic acid bacterial dynamics in non-wilted and wilted alfalfa silage in tropical conditions.

Molecular Biology Reports 2018 November 16
This study was conducted to evaluate the fermentative profile and microbial populations of wilted and non-wilted alfalfa silages ensiled with or without inoculant and the population dynamics of lactic acid bacteria (LAB) of wilted alfalfa plant and theirs silage. A 2 × 2 × 6 factorial arrangement was used, with the absence or presence of wilting (W), with and without bacterial inoculant (I) and six fermentation periods (P) (1, 3, 7, 14, 28 and 56 days), in a completely randomized design, with three replicates. The alfalfa was slightly wilted for 6 h and increased the dry matter content from 133.9 to 233.4 g/kg. It was performed the cultivation, followed by the isolation of LAB from samples of alfalfa forage before ensiling and its silage only in non-inoculated silages, after different fermentation periods. DNA was extracted from the isolated strains of LAB; the 16S rRNA gene sequences were amplified by PCR and the sequences were compared to those available from the GenBank database. Wilting provided silages with lower pH, ammonia nitrogen and acetic acid concentrations. The wilting process did not alter the amount of LAB; however, it affected the LAB diversity of the silages. The Lactobacillus plantarum was the predominant species in non-wilted and wilted silages.

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