Sesbania and lablab supplementation of oat hay basal diet fed to sheep with or without maize grain

This study investigated the effects of supplementing oat hay (OH; milk stage at harvest) with 250 g(as-fed) of either lablab (Dolichos lablab, 50 percent flowering at harvest) hay or sun dried leaves of sesbania (Sesbania sesban) with or without 91 g dry matter (DM) of crushed maize grain on rumen p...

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Main Authors: Nsahlai, I.V., Umunna, N.N.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Elsevier 1996
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/28196
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author Nsahlai, I.V.
Umunna, N.N.
author_browse Nsahlai, I.V.
Umunna, N.N.
author_facet Nsahlai, I.V.
Umunna, N.N.
author_sort Nsahlai, I.V.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description This study investigated the effects of supplementing oat hay (OH; milk stage at harvest) with 250 g(as-fed) of either lablab (Dolichos lablab, 50 percent flowering at harvest) hay or sun dried leaves of sesbania (Sesbania sesban) with or without 91 g dry matter (DM) of crushed maize grain on rumen pH and ammonia concentration (RAC), intake, degradability, rumen particle passage rate (kl) (in Experiment 1), digestibility, microbial N synthesis and live weight gain (LWG) (in Experiment 2). A randomized complete block design with a 2 X 2 factorial structure was used in both experiments. In sacco DM and N degradabilities of the feeds were also determined in three sheeSesbania degraded faster and to a greater extent than lablab DM. Lablab N was more soluble than sesbania N. Maize-free diets of sesbania and lablab had similar k1 but k1 was lower (P<0.05) for lablab than for sesbania in the presence of maize. No other effect of forage legume by maize grain interaction was significant. Crushed maize grain induced lower (P<0.05) pH, tended to depress the rate of OH degradation by 23 percent, depressed (P<0.05) hay intake, increased the intake of DM (P<0.05) and N (P<0.001) and the growth rate of sheep (P<0.05) but had no effect on the digestibility (DM, OM, neutral detergent fibre (NDF) or N) and microbial N synthesis. Multiple regression analysis indicated pH (P<0.03) but not RAC (P>0.05) affected the rate of OH degradation. Sesbania sustained higher (P<0.001) RAC, lower (P<0.05) potential degradability of OH and higher intakes (P<0.01; OH, DM and N), N digestibility (P<0.05), N retention (P<0.01) and microbial N synthesis (P<0.07) than lablab. Sesbania and lablab diets had similar rates of OH degradation, digestibility (DM, OM or NDF) and LWG. It was concluded that sesbania promoted higher OH intake and tended to increase (P<0.08) microbial N supply but had no effect on LWG. Maize grain tended to depress OH degradation rate but promoted faster LWG.
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spelling CGSpace281962023-12-08T19:36:04Z Sesbania and lablab supplementation of oat hay basal diet fed to sheep with or without maize grain Nsahlai, I.V. Umunna, N.N. sheep sesbania lablab maize oats hay growth This study investigated the effects of supplementing oat hay (OH; milk stage at harvest) with 250 g(as-fed) of either lablab (Dolichos lablab, 50 percent flowering at harvest) hay or sun dried leaves of sesbania (Sesbania sesban) with or without 91 g dry matter (DM) of crushed maize grain on rumen pH and ammonia concentration (RAC), intake, degradability, rumen particle passage rate (kl) (in Experiment 1), digestibility, microbial N synthesis and live weight gain (LWG) (in Experiment 2). A randomized complete block design with a 2 X 2 factorial structure was used in both experiments. In sacco DM and N degradabilities of the feeds were also determined in three sheeSesbania degraded faster and to a greater extent than lablab DM. Lablab N was more soluble than sesbania N. Maize-free diets of sesbania and lablab had similar k1 but k1 was lower (P<0.05) for lablab than for sesbania in the presence of maize. No other effect of forage legume by maize grain interaction was significant. Crushed maize grain induced lower (P<0.05) pH, tended to depress the rate of OH degradation by 23 percent, depressed (P<0.05) hay intake, increased the intake of DM (P<0.05) and N (P<0.001) and the growth rate of sheep (P<0.05) but had no effect on the digestibility (DM, OM, neutral detergent fibre (NDF) or N) and microbial N synthesis. Multiple regression analysis indicated pH (P<0.03) but not RAC (P>0.05) affected the rate of OH degradation. Sesbania sustained higher (P<0.001) RAC, lower (P<0.05) potential degradability of OH and higher intakes (P<0.01; OH, DM and N), N digestibility (P<0.05), N retention (P<0.01) and microbial N synthesis (P<0.07) than lablab. Sesbania and lablab diets had similar rates of OH degradation, digestibility (DM, OM or NDF) and LWG. It was concluded that sesbania promoted higher OH intake and tended to increase (P<0.08) microbial N supply but had no effect on LWG. Maize grain tended to depress OH degradation rate but promoted faster LWG. 1996-09 2013-05-06T07:00:07Z 2013-05-06T07:00:07Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/28196 en Limited Access Elsevier Animal Feed Science and Technology;61(1-4): 275-289
spellingShingle sheep
sesbania
lablab
maize
oats
hay
growth
Nsahlai, I.V.
Umunna, N.N.
Sesbania and lablab supplementation of oat hay basal diet fed to sheep with or without maize grain
title Sesbania and lablab supplementation of oat hay basal diet fed to sheep with or without maize grain
title_full Sesbania and lablab supplementation of oat hay basal diet fed to sheep with or without maize grain
title_fullStr Sesbania and lablab supplementation of oat hay basal diet fed to sheep with or without maize grain
title_full_unstemmed Sesbania and lablab supplementation of oat hay basal diet fed to sheep with or without maize grain
title_short Sesbania and lablab supplementation of oat hay basal diet fed to sheep with or without maize grain
title_sort sesbania and lablab supplementation of oat hay basal diet fed to sheep with or without maize grain
topic sheep
sesbania
lablab
maize
oats
hay
growth
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/28196
work_keys_str_mv AT nsahlaiiv sesbaniaandlablabsupplementationofoathaybasaldietfedtosheepwithorwithoutmaizegrain
AT umunnann sesbaniaandlablabsupplementationofoathaybasaldietfedtosheepwithorwithoutmaizegrain