Forty Menz rams weighing 20 to 22 kg and aged 13 to 18 months were individually offered 1·0 kg/day chopped maize stover and one of five supplements over a 70-day growth trial followed by a 10-day metabolism trial. The amounts of supplement offered were designed to supply 4·4 g nitrogen per day and with stover, sufficient nutrients to allow growth rates of 50 g/day. The control supplement, 80 g dry matter (DM) per day extracted noug (Guizotia abyssinica) meal, was compared with 194 to 212 g DM per day of fruits (pods (carpels) with seeds) of Acacia tortilis, A. albida, A. nilotica and A. sieberiana. For the control and four Acacia supplements respectively, mean growth rates were 32, 32, 21, 16, 4 (s.e.6) g/day and mean stover intakes 483, 430, 401, 347, 320 (s.e. 74) g DM per day. The low growth rates and intakes with A. sieberiana and to a lesser extent A. nilotica were probably related to their content of phenolic compounds including insoluble proanthocyanidins which may have lowered the digestibility of neutral-detergent fibre and nitrogen. A. tortilis and A. albida would appear to be of comparable nutritive value to noug meal as supplements to maize stover. Unlike noug meal Acacia fruits are widely available in rural areas of Africa. Further research is required to identify other tree species suitable for use as supplements and how to overcome the anti-nutritional factors.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.