Literature DB >> 31456139

Dichanthium hay combined with green cassava foliage or pelleted cassava foliage as fed for Black Belly rams.

Nathalie Minatchy1, Carine Marie-Magdeleine1, Valériuse Calif1, Yoan Félicité1, Fred Periacarpin2, Christian Deloumeau2, Frederic Pommier2, Harry Archimède3.   

Abstract

Intake, digestion and nitrogen retention were measured in fifteen 1-year-old Black Belly rams that had an average weight of 35.3 (± 1.59) kg and that consumed mixed diets. Diets consisted of old Dichanthium spp. hay distributed ad libitum, combined with 500 g (dry matter basis) of green or pelleted cassava foliage. Alfalfa pellets were used as a control for foliage supplement. The experiment was run in a 3 × 3 Latin square design. Total dry matter intake was lower (P < 0.05) with the green foliage cassava diet compared with the alfalfa pellet diet. Differences were not significant (P < 0.12) with the green cassava foliage diet compared with the cassava foliage pellet diet. Total tract digestion of organic matter, crude protein and cell wall components in cassava green foliage and cassava foliage pellet diets were significantly lower than in the alfalfa diet. Crude protein total tract digestion was similar for cassava green foliage and cassava foliage pellet diets, while fibre digestion was lower with cassava green foliage diets. Retained nitrogen was significantly higher with the alfalfa diet compared with cassava diets-between which there were no differences. Urinary nitrogen excretion was similar between all diets. In conclusion, pelleting does not decrease the feed value of cassava foliage, but this value is nevertheless lower than the feed value of alfalfa.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Cassava foliage; Non-conventional resources; Ruminant; Tannin; Tropical

Year:  2019        PMID: 31456139     DOI: 10.1007/s11250-019-02045-3

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Trop Anim Health Prod        ISSN: 0049-4747            Impact factor:   1.559


  13 in total

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