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Effect of Palm Kernel Cake Supplementation on Voluntary Feed Intake, In Situ Rumen Degradability and Performance in Buffaloes in the Eastern Amazon.

João Maria do Amaral-JúniorEziquiel de MoraisAlyne Cristina Sodré LimaLucieta Guerreiro MartoranoBenjamim de Souza NahúmLuciano Fernandes SousaJosé de Brito Lourenço-JúniorThomaz Cyro Guimarães de Carvalho RodriguesJamile Andréa Rodrigues da SilvaArtur Luiz da Costa SilvaAndré Guimarães Maciel E Silva
Published in: Animals : an open access journal from MDPI (2023)
The objective was to evaluate the effects of palm kernel cake (PKC) supplementation on voluntary feed intake, in situ rumen degradability and performance in the wettest (WS-January to June) and less rainy seasons (LR-July to December) in the eastern Amazon. A total of 52 crossbred buffaloes that were neither lactating nor gestating were used, with 24 for the LR, aged 34 ± 04 months and an initial average weight of 503 ± 48 kg, and 24 for the WS aged 40 ± 04 months with an average weight of 605 ± 56 kg. The four treatments (levels of PKC in relation to body weight) were distributed in a completely randomized design, with 0% (PKC0), 0.25% (PKC0.2), 0.5% (PKC0.5) and 1% (PKC1) with six repetitions. The animals were housed in Marandu grass paddocks, intermittently, with access to water and mineral mixture ad libitum. Degradability was evaluated by the in situ bag technique in four other crossbred buffaloes with rumen cannulae, in a 4 × 4 Latin square (four periods and four treatments). The inclusion of PKC increased supplement consumption and production of ether extracts and reduced the intake of forage and non-fibrous carbohydrates. The dry matter degradability of Marandu grass was not affected; however, the fermentation kinetics in neutral detergent fiber (NDF) differed between the treatments. The co-product dry matter colonization time was greater in PKC1 and the highest effective degradability rates were from PKC0, but the productive performance of the animals was not influenced. Supplementation of buffaloes with PKC is recommended for up to 1% of body weight.
Keyphrases
  • body weight
  • protein kinase
  • weight gain
  • body mass index
  • physical activity
  • weight loss
  • clinical trial
  • open label
  • randomized controlled trial
  • phase iii
  • phase ii