Ground woody products and urea are low-cost roughage and N sources. Rambouillet ewe lambs (n = 48, 6 lambs/treatment; initial BW = 42 kg ± 3.8) were used to evaluate effects of using ground Juniperus pinchotii (juniper) and urea in supplements on feedlot lamb growth traits, blood serum parameters, and fecal characteristics. In a randomized complete block design (40 d), lambs were individually fed an ad libitum basal sorghum-Sudangrass hay diet, which was fed separate from 1 of 8 supplemental diets (6 lambs/diet; 533 g of supplement/d, as-fed basis). Treatment structure was a 4 × 2 factorial: 4 concentrations of ground juniper (JN: 15%, 30%, 45%, or 60% of DM) and 2 concentrations of urea (UR: 1 or 3% of DM). Lamb growth traits were evaluated on d 0, 5, 12, 19, 26, 33, and 40; blood serum was evaluated on d 6 to 8, 20 to 22, and 34 (at h 3 and 6), and feces was evaluated on d 35. Compared to lambs fed all of the other treatments, lambs fed JN60UR1 or JN60UR3 had reduced supplement DMI (negative quadratic, P = 0.007). Hay and total DMI were variable across day (JN × UR × day, P < 0.04), but no linear or quadratic trends were detected (P > 0.10). A JN × day interaction was detected (P < 0.001) for lamb BW and the JN × day negative quadratic trend (P = 0.02) for BW was influenced by reduced ADG (linear decrease, P < 0.001) of lambs fed JN60. Lambs supplemented with UR3 vs. UR1 tended (P = 0.06) to have reduced BW but had similar (P > 0.17) ADG and G:F. Lamb G:F fluctuated across day (JN × day, P = 0.007), but the JN × day quadratic trend (P < 0.001) was mainly due to reduced G:F in lambs fed JN45 or JN60 diets. As the percentage of JN increased in the supplement, serum IGF-1 linearly decreased (P = 0.04), and serum urea N quadratically increased (P < 0.001). The UR × hour interaction (P < 0.001) for serum urea N resulted from a greater decline from 3 to 6 h after feeding in lambs supplemented with UR1 vs. UR3. Increasing JN concentration tended to quadratically increase (P = 0.09) fecal DM and linearly decrease (P = 0.002) fecal N, but an effect due to dietary UR was not detected (P > 0.34). Results indicated that daily supplement DMI was restricted only by using JN60. However, a 60% JN-based supplement will not make an effective rangeland supplement for growing ewe lambs, and using 3% UR should not be considered, especially since daily UR intake was not restricted enough to be considered safe.
CITATION STYLE
Whitney, T. R. (2017). Ground juniperus pinchotii and urea in supplements fed to rambouillet ewe lambs: I. feedlot growth traits, blood serum parameters, and fecal characteristics. Journal of Animal Science, 95(8), 3676–3686. https://doi.org/10.2527/jas.2017.1419
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