Abstract: | The effects of duration of heating on the composition and digestibility of whole cotton seed, almond hulls, whole pressed safflower seed and alfalfa were studied. The four commodities were heated at 125°C from 0 to 120 h. Nitrogen and ash values were relatively stable across commodities and heating times. However, acid detergent fibre, neutral detergent fibre, in-vitro neutral detergent fibre remaining after 48 h fermentation and acid detergent insoluble nitrogen increased hyperbolically, approaching a relatively constant value at long heating times for all commodities. The sensitivity of each commodity to heat damage was different, and the rate that each analysis value approached a relatively constant value differed across commodities. In general, alfalfa was the most sensitive and whole cotton seed the least sensitive for a given nutrient change with heating time. Also the amount of neutral detergent fibre digested approached a relatively constant value at longer heating times for whole cotton seed, whole pressed safflower seed and alfalfa while approaching zero for almond hulls. Prior analysis of an unheated commodity is necessary to utilise compositional analyses to determine heat damage. |