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Feeding value of sorghum stover fed to tropical hair sheep as complete rations in chop, mash, pellet, and block forms

BACKGROUND AND AIM: Poor palatability, low bulk density, and low nutritive value restrict the utilization of the crop residues as animal feeds. Altering the physical characteristics of feed by blending the roughage and concentrates in the form of complete feed improves the nutrient use efficiency an...

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Autores principales: Raju, J., Narasimha, J., Kumari, N. Nalini, Raghunanadan, T., Preetam, V. Chinni, Kumar, A. Ashok, Reddy, P. Ravi Kanth
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Veterinary World 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8448627/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34566349
http://dx.doi.org/10.14202/vetworld.2021.2273-2281
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author Raju, J.
Narasimha, J.
Kumari, N. Nalini
Raghunanadan, T.
Preetam, V. Chinni
Kumar, A. Ashok
Reddy, P. Ravi Kanth
author_facet Raju, J.
Narasimha, J.
Kumari, N. Nalini
Raghunanadan, T.
Preetam, V. Chinni
Kumar, A. Ashok
Reddy, P. Ravi Kanth
author_sort Raju, J.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND AND AIM: Poor palatability, low bulk density, and low nutritive value restrict the utilization of the crop residues as animal feeds. Altering the physical characteristics of feed by blending the roughage and concentrates in the form of complete feed improves the nutrient use efficiency and reduces the feed wastage, feed cost, and labor cost. The study aims to determine suitable processing methods (mash, pellet, or block forms) for efficient utilization of sorghum stover-based complete rations vis-a-vis conventional feeding methods in sheep. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The sorghum stover was incorporated in complete rations with roughage to concentrate ratio of 50:50 proportion in a growth trial of 120 days. The feed ingredients were chaffed, ground in a hammer mill, passed through expander-extruder, and compressed by feed block machine to prepare chop, mash, pellet, and block form of rations, respectively. Twenty-four male intact growing Nellore×Deccani cross lambs (3.5±0.5 months age, 14.50±0.41 kg (mean ± SD) at the start of the experiment) were divided into four experimental groups of six animals each in a complete randomized design. The experimental rations were randomly allotted to each group and evaluated for their intake, nutrient utilization, and growth performance. RESULTS: The sheep fed on pellet-based ration consumed a higher (p<0.05) quantity of dry matter. The digestibility coefficients of organic matter, crude protein, and neutral detergent fiber were higher (p<0.05) in processed rations (mash, pellet, or block). Further, the nitrogen balance (g/d) was higher (p<0.05) in the mash, pellet, and block form of rations, compared to chopped ration. The processing method did not influence calcium or phosphorous balance parameters, except for their urinary losses, which showed an increasing trend (p=0.07). The ram lambs fed with pelleted ration showed higher (p<0.05) weight gain than mash, block, or chaff forms. The efficiency of feed utilization in gaining one kg body weight was higher (p<0.05) in lambs fed a pelleted diet. Feeding pelletized ration was more economical to gain one kg body weight. The bulk density was highest for block-based ration followed by pellet, mash, and conventional rations, and the carrying capacity of truck was highest with the least transport cost in block-form of rations. CONCLUSION: Physical processing (mash, pellet, and block) of sorghum stover-based complete rations increased the nutrient utilization and growth performance of sheep compared to conventional chopped form. Pelleting the mash with expander-extruder procedure was found to be more profitable. Nevertheless, the cost economics revealed blocks as more preferable forms for transporting the complete rations to larger distances.
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spelling pubmed-84486272021-09-24 Feeding value of sorghum stover fed to tropical hair sheep as complete rations in chop, mash, pellet, and block forms Raju, J. Narasimha, J. Kumari, N. Nalini Raghunanadan, T. Preetam, V. Chinni Kumar, A. Ashok Reddy, P. Ravi Kanth Vet World Research Article BACKGROUND AND AIM: Poor palatability, low bulk density, and low nutritive value restrict the utilization of the crop residues as animal feeds. Altering the physical characteristics of feed by blending the roughage and concentrates in the form of complete feed improves the nutrient use efficiency and reduces the feed wastage, feed cost, and labor cost. The study aims to determine suitable processing methods (mash, pellet, or block forms) for efficient utilization of sorghum stover-based complete rations vis-a-vis conventional feeding methods in sheep. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The sorghum stover was incorporated in complete rations with roughage to concentrate ratio of 50:50 proportion in a growth trial of 120 days. The feed ingredients were chaffed, ground in a hammer mill, passed through expander-extruder, and compressed by feed block machine to prepare chop, mash, pellet, and block form of rations, respectively. Twenty-four male intact growing Nellore×Deccani cross lambs (3.5±0.5 months age, 14.50±0.41 kg (mean ± SD) at the start of the experiment) were divided into four experimental groups of six animals each in a complete randomized design. The experimental rations were randomly allotted to each group and evaluated for their intake, nutrient utilization, and growth performance. RESULTS: The sheep fed on pellet-based ration consumed a higher (p<0.05) quantity of dry matter. The digestibility coefficients of organic matter, crude protein, and neutral detergent fiber were higher (p<0.05) in processed rations (mash, pellet, or block). Further, the nitrogen balance (g/d) was higher (p<0.05) in the mash, pellet, and block form of rations, compared to chopped ration. The processing method did not influence calcium or phosphorous balance parameters, except for their urinary losses, which showed an increasing trend (p=0.07). The ram lambs fed with pelleted ration showed higher (p<0.05) weight gain than mash, block, or chaff forms. The efficiency of feed utilization in gaining one kg body weight was higher (p<0.05) in lambs fed a pelleted diet. Feeding pelletized ration was more economical to gain one kg body weight. The bulk density was highest for block-based ration followed by pellet, mash, and conventional rations, and the carrying capacity of truck was highest with the least transport cost in block-form of rations. CONCLUSION: Physical processing (mash, pellet, and block) of sorghum stover-based complete rations increased the nutrient utilization and growth performance of sheep compared to conventional chopped form. Pelleting the mash with expander-extruder procedure was found to be more profitable. Nevertheless, the cost economics revealed blocks as more preferable forms for transporting the complete rations to larger distances. Veterinary World 2021-08 2021-08-30 /pmc/articles/PMC8448627/ /pubmed/34566349 http://dx.doi.org/10.14202/vetworld.2021.2273-2281 Text en Copyright: © Raju, et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Open Access. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) ) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
spellingShingle Research Article
Raju, J.
Narasimha, J.
Kumari, N. Nalini
Raghunanadan, T.
Preetam, V. Chinni
Kumar, A. Ashok
Reddy, P. Ravi Kanth
Feeding value of sorghum stover fed to tropical hair sheep as complete rations in chop, mash, pellet, and block forms
title Feeding value of sorghum stover fed to tropical hair sheep as complete rations in chop, mash, pellet, and block forms
title_full Feeding value of sorghum stover fed to tropical hair sheep as complete rations in chop, mash, pellet, and block forms
title_fullStr Feeding value of sorghum stover fed to tropical hair sheep as complete rations in chop, mash, pellet, and block forms
title_full_unstemmed Feeding value of sorghum stover fed to tropical hair sheep as complete rations in chop, mash, pellet, and block forms
title_short Feeding value of sorghum stover fed to tropical hair sheep as complete rations in chop, mash, pellet, and block forms
title_sort feeding value of sorghum stover fed to tropical hair sheep as complete rations in chop, mash, pellet, and block forms
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8448627/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34566349
http://dx.doi.org/10.14202/vetworld.2021.2273-2281
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