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.
CITATION STYLE
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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