One hundred thirty New Zealand White x California rabbits were used to study the influence of the source of dietary fiber on several digestive criteria. Five diets were formulated to provide 10% crude fiber (CF) on a DM basis. Sixty percent of this dietary fiber was supplied by alfalfa hay, citrus pulp, beet pulp, grape marc, or rice hulls in the diets. Weights of cecal contents, cecal ammonia concentration, and molar proportion of acetic acid in diets including pulps were higher and cecal levels of DM, CP, and molar proportion of butyric acid were lower than those of the alfalfa diet. Cecal ammonia, VFA, and CF concentrations of the grape marc diet were the lowest of all the diets studied; cecal CF level and molar proportion of acetic acid were significantly higher and CP level and molar proportion of butyric acid were lower in rice hull than in alfalfa diets. Diet had no influence on daily soft feces excretion (10 g DM/d), but N contribution of soft feces to N intake was higher in the diet with citrus pulp (18.7%) than in the other diets (12%). Mean retention time (R) was measured using fuchsin-stained feed and was found to be higher (21.3 h) in the rice hull diet and lower (9.3 h) in the grape marc diet than in the other diets. When coprophagy was prevented, R decreased by 0 to 7 h. In conclusion, the use of byproducts to substitute for traditional sources of fiber in rabbit diets influenced the retention time of the digesta in some segments of the gut and thus altered several digestive criteria.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Two hundred ten Californian x New Zealand White rabbits were used to study the influence of diet and slaughter weight (2.0, 2.25, and 2.5 kg) on feed intake, growth, feed efficiency, carcass characteristics, and body chemical composition. Seven diets were formulated to contain 24% ADF: Diet C (control) had no added fat; Diets T, O, and S contained 3% of added beef tallow, oleins, and soybean oil, respectively; Diets TWS, OWS, and SWS contained the same level and types of fat plus 18% heated whole soybeans (WS) to increase the dietary fat by 3%. Fat addition did not affect ADG or dressing percentage, but it improved feed:gain ratio (.06 for each 1% of dietary fat, P < .001). Although the main measurements of carcass were not influenced by fat addition, the rabbits fed diets containing the highest fat percentage had the highest weights of perirenal (P < .001) and scapular (P < .01) depots and the highest body fat content (P < .01). The increase in slaughter weight improved all the desirable carcass characteristics measured but imparied feed:gain (by 13%, P < .001). Increasing slaughter weight also increased the perirenal and scapular fat depots by 40 an 24%, respectively (P < .001)< and the body fat content by 28% (P < .01). There were no differences in the utilization of animal and vegetable fats, and only for some traits ADG, feed intake, kidney weights) did the diets with soybean oil result in better responses than those with oleins. The results indicate that fat addition to fibrous diets extends the rabbit's growing period without impairing the feed:gain ratio. The joints of rabbits killed at heavier weights have more desirable weights for marketing the carcass on a retail cut basis.
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.