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Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of postweaning feeding on the performance and energy balance of female rabbits at different physiological states

TLDR
Feeding young does a high-fiber diet until their first kindling reduced the chemical and energy body deficit at the end of the first lactation.
Abstract
The feeding of a high-fiber and low-energy diet to young rabbit does from weaning to the first kindling was used to modify their body reserves, stimulate their energy intake, and reduce the energy deficit during the first lactation. Rabbits (53 per group) were given ad libitum access to either a control or high-fiber diet (CP, 17.6 vs 15.8% of DM; crude fiber, 15.5 vs 19.9% of DM; digestible energy, 2,565 vs 2,261 kcal/kg of DM, respectively) from weaning to their first kindling. During lactation, both groups received the same diet, which contained 19.3% CP, 16.5% crude fiber, and 2,634 kcal/kg digestible energy (dry matter basis). Four comparative slaughters were performed to estimate the chemical and energy balance of rabbit does at different physiological states: at the beginning of the trial (12 rabbits, 45 d of age), at mating (10 rabbits per group, 136 d), at kindling (10 rabbits per group, 167 d), and at the end of lactation (12 and 11 rabbits for the control and the high-fiber group, 197 d). Large changes in body weight and composition were observed between slaughters. From 45 d to mating, doe body fat and energy increased 7.93 and 4.64 times the initial content, respectively. During pregnancy, body protein concentration decreased from 203 to 186 g/kg. At the end of lactation, body fat and energy concentration were reduced to values close to those measured at 45 d of age. Dietary treatment affected body chemical and energy balance during pregnancy and lactation but not reproductive and lactational performance. The high-fiber diet stimulated feed intake from weaning to the first kindling but not dietary energy intake. During lactation, the rabbits fed the high-fiber diet ate 10 kcal.d -1 .kg live weight -.75 more and lost less body fat (-405 vs -504 g) and body energy (-3,628 vs -4,294 kcal) than the does fed the control diet (P < .001). In the same period, all does showed water and protein retention (185 and 45 g, on average) regardless of dietary treatment. In conclusion, feeding young does a high-fiber diet until their first kindling reduced the chemical and energy body deficit at the end of the first lactation.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Rabbit milk: A review of quantity, quality and non-dietary affecting factors

TL;DR: A literature review focusing on the milk yield and milk composition of rabbits and the non-nutritional factors affecting both quantity and quality is presented in this article, where the number of suckling kits, parity order (primiparous vs. multiparous) and the gestation overlapping degree (rapid decline after 17-20 days of gestation).
Journal ArticleDOI

Energy balance and reproductive performance in rabbit does

TL;DR: Interest and limitations of several strategies to reduce the body energy deficit in reproducing does and to improve their fertility and thus lifespan are discussed: rearing, feeding, management, genetic selection.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of parity order and litter weaning age on the performance and body energy balance of rabbit does

TL;DR: According to these results, multiparous does showed a lower but still relevant energy deficit than primiparous did and early weaning permitted us to reduce body energy deficit, especially at lower parity orders.
Journal ArticleDOI

Hypercarnivory and the brain: protein requirements of cats reconsidered

TL;DR: According to the model presented here, the high protein requirement of the domestic cat is the result of routing of amino acids into gluconeogenesis to supply the needs of the brain and other glucose-requiring tissues, resulting in oxidation of amino acid in excess of the rate predicted for a non-hypercarnivorous mammal of the same size.
Journal ArticleDOI

The main factors affecting the reproductive performance of rabbit does: a review.

TL;DR: In this article, the main factors affecting the reproductive performance of rabbit does are discussed, such as kindling order, litter size, genetic strain, weaning age and reproductive rhythm.
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