Nutritive value of brewers’ grain and maize silage for fattening rabbits

Specific knowledge of the nutritive value of raw materials is fundamental to formulate balanced diets for rabbits and allows greater use of by-products and non-conventional feedstuffs. This paper examines the feeding value of sun-dried brewers’ grain and maize silage (whole plant) for fattening rabb...

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Main Authors: H. Guermah, L. Maertens, M. Berchiche
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universitat Politècnica de València 2016-09-01
Series:World Rabbit Science
Subjects:
Online Access:http://polipapers.upv.es/index.php/wrs/article/view/4353
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spelling doaj-138a09b58b06491193adb753e590211b2020-11-25T02:59:17ZengUniversitat Politècnica de ValènciaWorld Rabbit Science1257-50111989-88862016-09-0124318318910.4995/wrs.2016.43534814Nutritive value of brewers’ grain and maize silage for fattening rabbitsH. Guermah0L. Maertens1M. Berchiche2University M. Boudiaf University M. MammeriInstitute for Agricultural and Fisheries ResearchUniversity M. MammeriSpecific knowledge of the nutritive value of raw materials is fundamental to formulate balanced diets for rabbits and allows greater use of by-products and non-conventional feedstuffs. This paper examines the feeding value of sun-dried brewers’ grain and maize silage (whole plant) for fattening rabbits. Twenty-four individually caged 8-wk-old rabbits were used to determine the digestibility. Both wet products were sun-dried and ground before being incorporated into a basal diet. The inclusion level at the expense of all basal ingredients amounted to 30%. Basal diet and both experimental diets were fed ad libitum to 8 rabbits during the 4-d balance trial. The determined digestibility of protein, fat, crude fibre and neutral detergent fibre digestibility amounted to 76.2 and 77.2%; 86.5 and 99.1%; 8.1 and 8.3% and 28.0 and 13.5%, respectively, for brewers’ grain and maize silage. The digestible energy content amounted to 11.66 MJ/kg dry matter (DM) (brewers’ grain) and 11.10 MJ/kg DM (maize silage). Both by-products have potential as alternative feedstuff in rabbit diets. However, further experiments are necessary to determine the effect of ensilaging the whole maize plant, as a significantly lower (P<0.001) feed intake was observed.http://polipapers.upv.es/index.php/wrs/article/view/4353fattening rabbitbrewers’ grainmaize silagedigestibilitynutritive value
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author H. Guermah
L. Maertens
M. Berchiche
spellingShingle H. Guermah
L. Maertens
M. Berchiche
Nutritive value of brewers’ grain and maize silage for fattening rabbits
World Rabbit Science
fattening rabbit
brewers’ grain
maize silage
digestibility
nutritive value
author_facet H. Guermah
L. Maertens
M. Berchiche
author_sort H. Guermah
title Nutritive value of brewers’ grain and maize silage for fattening rabbits
title_short Nutritive value of brewers’ grain and maize silage for fattening rabbits
title_full Nutritive value of brewers’ grain and maize silage for fattening rabbits
title_fullStr Nutritive value of brewers’ grain and maize silage for fattening rabbits
title_full_unstemmed Nutritive value of brewers’ grain and maize silage for fattening rabbits
title_sort nutritive value of brewers’ grain and maize silage for fattening rabbits
publisher Universitat Politècnica de València
series World Rabbit Science
issn 1257-5011
1989-8886
publishDate 2016-09-01
description Specific knowledge of the nutritive value of raw materials is fundamental to formulate balanced diets for rabbits and allows greater use of by-products and non-conventional feedstuffs. This paper examines the feeding value of sun-dried brewers’ grain and maize silage (whole plant) for fattening rabbits. Twenty-four individually caged 8-wk-old rabbits were used to determine the digestibility. Both wet products were sun-dried and ground before being incorporated into a basal diet. The inclusion level at the expense of all basal ingredients amounted to 30%. Basal diet and both experimental diets were fed ad libitum to 8 rabbits during the 4-d balance trial. The determined digestibility of protein, fat, crude fibre and neutral detergent fibre digestibility amounted to 76.2 and 77.2%; 86.5 and 99.1%; 8.1 and 8.3% and 28.0 and 13.5%, respectively, for brewers’ grain and maize silage. The digestible energy content amounted to 11.66 MJ/kg dry matter (DM) (brewers’ grain) and 11.10 MJ/kg DM (maize silage). Both by-products have potential as alternative feedstuff in rabbit diets. However, further experiments are necessary to determine the effect of ensilaging the whole maize plant, as a significantly lower (P<0.001) feed intake was observed.
topic fattening rabbit
brewers’ grain
maize silage
digestibility
nutritive value
url http://polipapers.upv.es/index.php/wrs/article/view/4353
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