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Effects of green oak acorn (Quercus ilex) intake on nutrient digestibility, lamb growth, and carcass and non-carcass characteristics

The green oak (Quercus ilex) plays an important role in forest ecology when oaks are the dominant species or are plentiful. The use of acorns as an alternative to barley for livestock feeding can be beneficial for breeders. The aim of this study was the evaluation of the acorn intake by lambs in two...

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Autores principales: Mekki, Ilyes, Smeti, Samir, Hajji, Hadhami, Mahouachi, Mokhtar, Atti, Naziha
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Copernicus GmbH 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8935208/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35320990
http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/aab-65-113-2022
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author Mekki, Ilyes
Smeti, Samir
Hajji, Hadhami
Mahouachi, Mokhtar
Atti, Naziha
author_facet Mekki, Ilyes
Smeti, Samir
Hajji, Hadhami
Mahouachi, Mokhtar
Atti, Naziha
author_sort Mekki, Ilyes
collection PubMed
description The green oak (Quercus ilex) plays an important role in forest ecology when oaks are the dominant species or are plentiful. The use of acorns as an alternative to barley for livestock feeding can be beneficial for breeders. The aim of this study was the evaluation of the acorn intake by lambs in two stages, suckling and fattening, on growth, diet digestibility, carcass and non-carcass characteristics. For this, 32 lambs were used. During the suckling period, 16 lambs were reared on range pasture, supplied by barley (S-Ba), the other 16 on forest pasture and supplied by acorns (S-Ac). During the fattening period, lambs were assigned to concentrate based either on barley (F-Ba) or acorn (F-Ac) resulting in eight animals per suckling treatment per fattening treatment. The feed intake, diet digestibility and lamb growth were recorded. At 90 d of fattening, all animals were slaughtered and carcass traits studied. The main results show that the incorporation of acorn in concentrate was without effect on digestibility of organic matter, crud protein and neutral detergent fibre. The nitrogen balance was positive for animals fed barley concentrate or acorn one ( [Formula: see text]  g d [Formula: see text] ). The lamb growth rates and slaughter body weight were not affected by acorn incorporation in both phases ( [Formula: see text] ). Consequently, the carcass weights and carcass yields were similar. The F-Ac and S-Ac lambs had relatively heavier liver than F-Ba and S-Ba. The carcass composition in cutting pieces and that in tissues (muscle, fat and bone) was similar for all groups. These results suggest that acorns could replace partially conventional feedstuffs as concentrate without affecting animal performance and carcass quality.
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spelling pubmed-89352082022-03-22 Effects of green oak acorn (Quercus ilex) intake on nutrient digestibility, lamb growth, and carcass and non-carcass characteristics Mekki, Ilyes Smeti, Samir Hajji, Hadhami Mahouachi, Mokhtar Atti, Naziha Arch Anim Breed Original Study The green oak (Quercus ilex) plays an important role in forest ecology when oaks are the dominant species or are plentiful. The use of acorns as an alternative to barley for livestock feeding can be beneficial for breeders. The aim of this study was the evaluation of the acorn intake by lambs in two stages, suckling and fattening, on growth, diet digestibility, carcass and non-carcass characteristics. For this, 32 lambs were used. During the suckling period, 16 lambs were reared on range pasture, supplied by barley (S-Ba), the other 16 on forest pasture and supplied by acorns (S-Ac). During the fattening period, lambs were assigned to concentrate based either on barley (F-Ba) or acorn (F-Ac) resulting in eight animals per suckling treatment per fattening treatment. The feed intake, diet digestibility and lamb growth were recorded. At 90 d of fattening, all animals were slaughtered and carcass traits studied. The main results show that the incorporation of acorn in concentrate was without effect on digestibility of organic matter, crud protein and neutral detergent fibre. The nitrogen balance was positive for animals fed barley concentrate or acorn one ( [Formula: see text]  g d [Formula: see text] ). The lamb growth rates and slaughter body weight were not affected by acorn incorporation in both phases ( [Formula: see text] ). Consequently, the carcass weights and carcass yields were similar. The F-Ac and S-Ac lambs had relatively heavier liver than F-Ba and S-Ba. The carcass composition in cutting pieces and that in tissues (muscle, fat and bone) was similar for all groups. These results suggest that acorns could replace partially conventional feedstuffs as concentrate without affecting animal performance and carcass quality. Copernicus GmbH 2022-03-11 /pmc/articles/PMC8935208/ /pubmed/35320990 http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/aab-65-113-2022 Text en Copyright: © 2022 Ilyes Mekki et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. To view a copy of this licence, visit https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
spellingShingle Original Study
Mekki, Ilyes
Smeti, Samir
Hajji, Hadhami
Mahouachi, Mokhtar
Atti, Naziha
Effects of green oak acorn (Quercus ilex) intake on nutrient digestibility, lamb growth, and carcass and non-carcass characteristics
title Effects of green oak acorn (Quercus ilex) intake on nutrient digestibility, lamb growth, and carcass and non-carcass characteristics
title_full Effects of green oak acorn (Quercus ilex) intake on nutrient digestibility, lamb growth, and carcass and non-carcass characteristics
title_fullStr Effects of green oak acorn (Quercus ilex) intake on nutrient digestibility, lamb growth, and carcass and non-carcass characteristics
title_full_unstemmed Effects of green oak acorn (Quercus ilex) intake on nutrient digestibility, lamb growth, and carcass and non-carcass characteristics
title_short Effects of green oak acorn (Quercus ilex) intake on nutrient digestibility, lamb growth, and carcass and non-carcass characteristics
title_sort effects of green oak acorn (quercus ilex) intake on nutrient digestibility, lamb growth, and carcass and non-carcass characteristics
topic Original Study
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8935208/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35320990
http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/aab-65-113-2022
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