“…Additionally, alfalfa contains large quantities of dietary fiber, which could help to lower cholesterol levels. The use of tropical alfalfa (Kacang Ratu BW) in ducks (35 days) from 3% up to a level of 10 % did not affect the production performance of ducks, but reduced FCR ( Suwignyo et al, 2020a , Suwignyo et al, 2020b , Suwignyo et al, 2020c , Suwignyo et al, 2020d , Suwignyo et al, 2021c , Suwignyo et al, 2021d ) reduced cholesterol from 66.5 to 34.8 mg/100 g ( Samur et al, 2020 ) from 177.7 to 116.2 mg/100g (in the liver), 162.9 to 134 mg/100 (in the blood) and reduced LDL from 83.70 to 68.0 mg/dL but increased HDL from 54.6 to 71.96 mg/dL ( Suwignyo et al, 2022 ). The use of 2 % tropical alfalfa in laying hens (hyline 50 weeks old) produced eggs with higher levels of Fe, Zn, beta carotene, vitamin A and antioxidants than controls, respectively 5.6 vs 4.9 mg/100 g, 3.4 vs 1 mg/100 g, 1818.1 vs 1512.7 µg/100 g, 4934.9 vs 4382.9 µg/100 g, 4.9 vs 15.8 %, making it good for nutritional intervention for stunting eradication programs, that are still high in several developing countries, including Indonesia ( Suwignyo and Indartono, 2022 ).…”