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Journal ArticleDOI

Growth Performance and Reproductive Traits at First Parity of New Zealand White Female Rabbits as Affected by Heat Stress and Its Alleviation under Egyptian Conditions

TLDR
Alleviation of heat stress in the growing and adult female NZW rabbits was more efficient with drinking cool water than with supplementation with palm oil, natural clay or natural clay (as a natural enhancer to growth and milk production).
Abstract
Exposing growing and adult New Zealand White (NZW) female rabbits to severe heat stress (temperature-humidity index = 28.9) during summer adversely affected their growth and reproductive traits. The traits that declined significantly (p < 0.01) were the live body weight, daily weight gain and feed intake of growing rabbits, and the litter size and litter weight at weaning (p < 0.05) and the pre-weaning weight gain of pups (p < 0.01) for adult females. The conception rate declined considerably with heat stress. The declines in the values of the digestibility coefficients due to heat stress were 7.9% (p < 0.05) for dry matter (DM), 8.1% (p < 0.05) for crude protein (CP) and 1.0% for crude fibre (CF). The traits that increased significantly (p < 0.01) due to heat stress were water intake, water/feed ratio and rectal temperature in growing rabbits and pre-weaning mortality for adult females. Alleviation of heat stress in the growing and adult female NZW rabbits was more efficient with drinking cool water (10-15 degrees C; between 10:00 and 17:00) than with supplementation with palm oil (as a source of energy) or natural clay (as a natural enhancer to growth and milk production). Supplying the animals with cool drinking water gave the highest body weight and weight gain, conception rate, litter size and weight and digestibility coefficients for DM and CP and the lowest rectal temperature, respiration rate and pre-weaning mortality. The loss in rabbit production pertaining to heat stress estimated from the percentages of decline in conception rate x pre-weaning mortality x litter weight at weaning was 73.0%. The provision of cool water restored 11/12 of heat loss.

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Citations
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Effects of climate changes on animal production and sustainability of livestock systems

TL;DR: In this paper, the effects of climate change on livestock following the theory of global warming are discussed and a relevant increase of drought is expected across the world affecting forage and crop production, which will reduce the carrying capacity of rangelands and buffering ability of agropastoral and pastoral systems.
Journal ArticleDOI

Physiological traits as affected by heat stress in sheep—A review

TL;DR: It can be said that exposure of sheep to elevated ambient temperature negatively affects the biological functions which are reflected in the impairment of their production and reproduction traits.
Journal ArticleDOI

The physiological costs of reproduction in small mammals

TL;DR: Life-history trade-offs between components of fitness arise because reproduction entails both gains and costs, and knowledge of these physiological costs is currently at best described as rudimentary.
Journal ArticleDOI

Rabbits’ productive, reproductive and physiological performance traits as affected by heat stress: a review

TL;DR: Rabbits are very susceptible to heat stress, since they have few functional sweat glands and have difficulty in eliminating excess body heat, when the environmental temperature is high.
Journal ArticleDOI

Buffalo's biological functions as affected by heat stress - A review

TL;DR: It seems that the buffalo has a greater tolerance of cold weather than is commonly supposed due to its exposure to cold stress in some of the cold areas in which it exists in the world.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Multiple range and multiple f tests

David B. Duncan
- 01 Mar 1955 - 
Book

Review of Medical Physiology

TL;DR: This book presents a systematic review of medical physiology using a probabilistic method, aiming at determining the basic principles of physiology and its applications in medicine.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Application of Natural Zeolites in Animal Science and Aquaculture

TL;DR: A review of this subject reveals that both the ion-exchange and adsorption properties of natural zeolites can be exploited to make more efficient use of feed nitrogen in animal nutrition, to reduce intestinal diseases prevalent in young swine and ruminants, to control moisture and ammonia content of animal manure, to purify recirculating hatchery waters in aquaculture, and to provide oxygen-enriched air for fish breeding and transport.
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