Evaluation of a method to predict negative feedstuff associative effects in meat goats consuming diets with different forage sources and levels of concentrate

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Abstract

Effects of dietary concentrate level and grass hay source were determined to evaluate a method (www2. luresext.edu/goats/research/suppconc.html) of predicting negative associative effects between feedstuffs in Boer goat wethers. Forage DM intake (g/kg BW0.75) was similar (P =.157) between growing and yearling wethers (34.9 and 30.8) and ranked 0 and 15 > 30 > 45 g/kg BW0.75 of concentrate dry matter (48.5, 41.8, 25.9, and 15.2, respectively). Age and concentrate level interacted in neutral detergent fibre digestibility (57.3%, 60.6%, 61.4%, and 58.4% for growing and 56.6, 62.9, 56.8, and 30.0% for yearling wethers with 0, 15, 30, and 45 g/kg BW0.75, respectively). There was a tendency (P =.074) for an interaction in metabolizable energy (ME) intake between age and concentrate level (361, 530, 634, and 709 for growing and 363, 547, 541, and 555 kJ/kg BW0.75 for yearling wethers with 0, 15, 30, and 45 g/ kg BW0.75); values predicted for treatments with concentrate were 563, 631, and 619 for growing and 575, 684, and 697 kJ/kg BW0.75 for yearling wethers with 15, 30, and 45 g/kg BW0.75, respectively. In conclusion, ME intake was accurately predicted for the low level of concentrate with both animal types and the moderate level with growing wethers.

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Dolebo, A. T., Puchala, R., Gipson, T. A., Dawson, L. J., Sahlu, T., & Goetsch, A. L. (2017). Evaluation of a method to predict negative feedstuff associative effects in meat goats consuming diets with different forage sources and levels of concentrate. Journal of Applied Animal Research, 45(1), 470–479. https://doi.org/10.1080/09712119.2016.1217867

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