Influence of amount of feed offered on growth, intake and selectivity: Observations on sheep and goats

Comparisons were made between 24 Ethiopian rams and 24 Galla goats for voluntary intake, feed selectivity and growth performance when offered three levels of sorghum stover. The levels observed were 25,50 and 75 g/kg live weight per day. Measurements of intake, growth and feed selectivity were taken...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Aboud, A.A.O., Owen, E., Reed, J.D., Said, A.N.
Format: Conference Paper
Language:Inglés
Published: International Livestock Centre for Africa 1993
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/5493
_version_ 1855536131614965760
author Aboud, A.A.O.
Owen, E.
Reed, J.D.
Said, A.N.
author_browse Aboud, A.A.O.
Owen, E.
Reed, J.D.
Said, A.N.
author_facet Aboud, A.A.O.
Owen, E.
Reed, J.D.
Said, A.N.
author_sort Aboud, A.A.O.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Comparisons were made between 24 Ethiopian rams and 24 Galla goats for voluntary intake, feed selectivity and growth performance when offered three levels of sorghum stover. The levels observed were 25,50 and 75 g/kg live weight per day. Measurements of intake, growth and feed selectivity were taken over a period of 10 weeks. Both sheep and goats consumed more stover (P<0.001) as rate of offer was increased (22, 31, 32 gDM/kg live weight per day; 19,26,29 g/kg live weight per day, respectively, for sheep and goats). Increasing the level of offer beyond 50g/kg live weight per day did not, however, promote a substantial increase in intake. No difference (P>0.05) was observed in the pattern of feed selectivity between sheep and goats. Both species showed a similar preference for leaf and sheath matter as the level of offer was increased. Sheep gained weight faster (P<0.001) than goats at all rates of offer, (28.0 vs 9.0; 54.0 vs 23.0; 62.0 vs 31.6 in favour of sheep). Those on a higher level of offer showed a faster rate of gain than those on a lower level of offer. It was concluded that both species can benefit from generous offers and that the benefit, judged by improved intake and growth, is due to selective feeding.
format Conference Paper
id CGSpace5493
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 1993
publishDateRange 1993
publishDateSort 1993
publisher International Livestock Centre for Africa
publisherStr International Livestock Centre for Africa
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace54932021-02-10T20:38:48Z Influence of amount of feed offered on growth, intake and selectivity: Observations on sheep and goats Aboud, A.A.O. Owen, E. Reed, J.D. Said, A.N. Comparisons were made between 24 Ethiopian rams and 24 Galla goats for voluntary intake, feed selectivity and growth performance when offered three levels of sorghum stover. The levels observed were 25,50 and 75 g/kg live weight per day. Measurements of intake, growth and feed selectivity were taken over a period of 10 weeks. Both sheep and goats consumed more stover (P<0.001) as rate of offer was increased (22, 31, 32 gDM/kg live weight per day; 19,26,29 g/kg live weight per day, respectively, for sheep and goats). Increasing the level of offer beyond 50g/kg live weight per day did not, however, promote a substantial increase in intake. No difference (P>0.05) was observed in the pattern of feed selectivity between sheep and goats. Both species showed a similar preference for leaf and sheath matter as the level of offer was increased. Sheep gained weight faster (P<0.001) than goats at all rates of offer, (28.0 vs 9.0; 54.0 vs 23.0; 62.0 vs 31.6 in favour of sheep). Those on a higher level of offer showed a faster rate of gain than those on a lower level of offer. It was concluded that both species can benefit from generous offers and that the benefit, judged by improved intake and growth, is due to selective feeding. 1993 2011-09-03T18:07:10Z 2011-09-03T18:07:10Z Conference Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/5493 en Open Access International Livestock Centre for Africa Aboud, A.A.O., Owen, E., Reed, J.D. and Said, A.N. 1993. Influence of amount of feed offered on growth, intake and selectivity: Observations on sheep and goats. In: Lebbie, S.H.B., Rey, B. and Irungu, E.K. 1993. Small ruminant research and development in Africa: Proceedings of the Second Biennial Conference of the African Small Ruminant Research Network, AICC, Arusha, Tanzania, 7-11 December 1992. Addis Ababa, Ethiopia: ILCA and Wageningen, The Netherlands: CTA.
spellingShingle Aboud, A.A.O.
Owen, E.
Reed, J.D.
Said, A.N.
Influence of amount of feed offered on growth, intake and selectivity: Observations on sheep and goats
title Influence of amount of feed offered on growth, intake and selectivity: Observations on sheep and goats
title_full Influence of amount of feed offered on growth, intake and selectivity: Observations on sheep and goats
title_fullStr Influence of amount of feed offered on growth, intake and selectivity: Observations on sheep and goats
title_full_unstemmed Influence of amount of feed offered on growth, intake and selectivity: Observations on sheep and goats
title_short Influence of amount of feed offered on growth, intake and selectivity: Observations on sheep and goats
title_sort influence of amount of feed offered on growth intake and selectivity observations on sheep and goats
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/5493
work_keys_str_mv AT aboudaao influenceofamountoffeedofferedongrowthintakeandselectivityobservationsonsheepandgoats
AT owene influenceofamountoffeedofferedongrowthintakeandselectivityobservationsonsheepandgoats
AT reedjd influenceofamountoffeedofferedongrowthintakeandselectivityobservationsonsheepandgoats
AT saidan influenceofamountoffeedofferedongrowthintakeandselectivityobservationsonsheepandgoats