scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

The nutrition of the early weaned lamb:I. The influence of protein concentration and feeding level on rate of gain in body weight

R. P. Andrews, +1 more
- 01 Aug 1970 - 
- Vol. 75, Iss: 01, pp 11-18
Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
The results agree reasonably well with estimates of protein requirements for lambs given by the Agricultural Research Council (1965) and the overall optimum dietary crude protein concentration for growth between 16 and 40 kg body weight was about 17·0, 15·0 and 11·0% when the mean digestible energy intake was 3·0.
Abstract
The live-weight gains of male and female lambs were measured during growth from 16 to 40 kg live weight when five cereal-based diets varying in dietary crude protein concentration (from 10 to 20%) were given at three levels in a 5×3×2 factorial design.Males grew faster than females by about 15% (P < 0·001); this difference increased with age and with the amount of feed given (P < 0·05). Growth rate responded linearly to increase in feeding level (P < 0·001) and curvilinearly to increase in dietary protein concentration (P < 0·01). A significant interaction (P < 0·01) occurred whereby growth increased with higher protein concentrations as feeding level increased.At the highest feeding level (near ad libitum) the results suggest that the optimum dietary crude protein concentration for growth was about 17·5, 15·0, 12·5 and 12·5% at body weights of 20, 25, 30 and 35 kg respectively. The overall optimum dietary crude protein concentration for growth between 16 and 40 kg body weight was about 17·0, 15·0 and 11·0% when the mean digestible energy intake was 3·0, 2·6 and 2·1 Mcal/day.The results agree reasonably well with estimates of protein requirements for lambs given by the Agricultural Research Council (1965).

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Poultry by-product meal as a substitute for soybean meal in the diets of growing hair sheep lambs fed whole chopped sugarcane

TL;DR: Poultry by-product meal was examined as a substitute for soybean meal (SBM) in the diets of tropical hair sheep lambs fed fresh whole chopped sugarcane (WCS) and iso-caloric 13.9 MJ DE/kg DM was formulated.
Journal Article

Comparison of different protein sources in enriched grain mixture for fattening lambs

TL;DR: It was concluded that the protein content of the feed grain as well as the price and availability of different protein sources will determine strategies for inclusion in diets for fattening lambs.
Journal ArticleDOI

Energy: Protein Ratio in Ruminants: Insights from the Intragastric Infusion Technique.

TL;DR: The total intragastric infusion technique (IIT) as mentioned in this paper allowed objective quantification of maintenance energy and protein requirements, volatile fatty acid utilisation efficiency, efficiency of energy utilisation for maintenance (Km) and growth (Kf) and the origin of N retention responses to independent variation of energy consumption.
Journal ArticleDOI

Yield and nutritive value of spring-sown sweet lupins (Lupinus angustifolius cv. Uniharvest) for lambs grazed at four different stages of growth 2. Nutritive value

TL;DR: Lupins (Lupinus angustifolius cv. Uniharvest) sown at two plant populations, were grazed at four successive growth stages with weaned lambs and in vitro digestibility and metabolisable energy concentration were highest at the pre-flowering grazing of plants sowed at 100 plants/m2.
References
Related Papers (5)