Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 March 2009
Adult sheep, unweaned and mature weaned calves have been examined by metabolic studies for sodium balance. The ratio of sodium input/output was near unity with only a very small amount of the ingested sodium salt being retained. A positive sodium balance was always present, with excess sodium salt being excreted. The main channel of sodium excretion was the kidney, although when sodium intake was increased the sodium content of the faeces showed a proportional increase. Unweaned calves, a few days old, were quite able to excrete excess sodium salts in concentrated urine.
There was a clear difference in preference for sodium salts over water, between weaned calves allowed access to sodium salts while being fed milk, and weaned calves denied sodium salts at the milk feeding stage. Sodium-naive calves showed a marked preference for sodium salt solutions while the sodium-experienced calves showed at best an indifference and sometimes even an aversion. With continued access to sodium salts the volume ingested declined steadily in both groups but food intake remained constant.
In both calves and sheep the preference for sodium salts showed considerable variation between animals. The evidence from parallel metabolic studies suggests that this variation indicates that salt intake is controlled by some mechanism, possibly in the central nervous system, which is activated by dynamic sodium metabolism. Our experimental results confirm that ruminants have a well developed salt taste but predilection for sodium salts could be a biochemical manifestation rather than a hedonic propensity.