Literature DB >> 25592373

Lactating performance, water and feed consumption of rabbit does reared under a Mediterranean summer circadian cycle of temperature v. comfort temperature conditions.

M H Bakr1, L Tusell1, O Rafel1, M Terré2, J P Sánchez1, M Piles1.   

Abstract

The general aim of this research was to study the effect of high ambient temperature on the performance of does during lactation, specifically the following factors: average daily feed (ADFI) and water (ADWI) intakes, daily milk yield (DMY); milk composition: dry matter (DM), CP and gross energy (GE); doe BW (DW); individual kit weaning weight (IWW) and litter survival rate during lactation (SR). The study was undertaken comparing the performance of two groups of contemporary does reared under the same management, feeding regime and environmental conditions, except the environmental temperature and humidity. A total of 80 females were randomly allocated, at 60 days of age, into two identical and continuous rooms. In one room, the temperature was maintained permanently within the thermo-neutral zone (between 18°C to 22°C); thus, environmental conditions in this room were considered as comfort conditions. In the second room, the environmental temperature pattern simulated the daily temperature cycles that were characteristic of the summer in Mediterranean countries (24°C at 0800 h, increasing up to 29°C until 1100 h; maintenance at 29°C to 31°C for 4 h and decreasing to about 24°C to 26°C around 1700 h until 0800 h of the following day), which were considered as thermal stress conditions. Females followed a semi-intensive reproductive rhythm, first artificial insemination at 4.5 months of age, with subsequent 42-day reproductive cycles. Traits were recorded from a total of 138 lactations. Does were controlled up to the 5th lactation. Data were analyzed using linear and linear mixed models. High ambient temperature led to a lower ADFI (-9.4%), DW (-6.2%) and IWW (-8%), but it did not affect ADWI. No significant difference was found either for DMY, milk composition (DM, CP and GE) and SR during the lactation period. Heat stress was moderate, and does were able to adapt to it behaviorally by decreasing feed intake (to reduce heat production), but also live weight, allowing them to preserve milk yield and composition for assuring litter survival. On the other hand, water consumption could not be the main animal mechanism to overcome heat stress.

Entities:  

Keywords:  food and water consumption; heat stress; milk composition; milk yield; rabbits

Mesh:

Year:  2015        PMID: 25592373     DOI: 10.1017/S1751731114003310

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Animal        ISSN: 1751-7311            Impact factor:   3.240


  3 in total

1.  Rabbit Maternal Behavior: A Perspective from Behavioral Neuroendocrinology, Animal Production, and Psychobiology.

Authors:  Gabriela González-Mariscal; Steffen Hoy; Kurt L Hoffman
Journal:  Adv Neurobiol       Date:  2022

Review 2.  Impacts of Heat Stress on Rabbit Immune Function, Endocrine, Blood Biochemical Changes, Antioxidant Capacity and Production Performance, and the Potential Mitigation Strategies of Nutritional Intervention.

Authors:  Zi-Long Liang; Fan Chen; Sungkwon Park; Balamuralikrishnan Balasubramanian; Wen-Chao Liu
Journal:  Front Vet Sci       Date:  2022-05-26

3.  Heat Stress Affects Faecal Microbial and Metabolic Alterations of Rabbits.

Authors:  Xue Bai; Yu Shi; Lipeng Tang; Li Chen; Huimei Fan; Haoding Wang; Jie Wang; Xianbo Jia; Shiyi Chen; Songjia Lai
Journal:  Front Microbiol       Date:  2022-02-28       Impact factor: 5.640

  3 in total

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