The effects of a yeast fermentation product on the average daily gain and digestibility on a rye grass hay based finishing diet for lambs

The purpose of this study was to determine if supplementation of a yeast fermentation product had an effect on the ADG, performance, and meat quality characteristics of Kathadin sheep fed a ryegrass hay based diet in drylot. Twenty-four Katahdin lambs were divided into two groups (male, n = 8; femal...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of animal science 2019-07, Vol.97, p.10-10
Hauptverfasser: Burt, Justin C, Boyd, Jamie, Garcia, Ivan, Splan, Rebecca, Perron, Brittany S
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Garcia, Ivan
Splan, Rebecca
Perron, Brittany S
description The purpose of this study was to determine if supplementation of a yeast fermentation product had an effect on the ADG, performance, and meat quality characteristics of Kathadin sheep fed a ryegrass hay based diet in drylot. Twenty-four Katahdin lambs were divided into two groups (male, n = 8; female n = 16) based on weight and gender: a control (CON) and treatment (TRT) used in a repeated block design. The lambs had a BW of 21.5 ± 2.5 kg, and concluded with a finishing weight of 36.3 ± 3.4 kg. Lambs were housed on dirt drylot with shade structures, and offered an ad libitum TMR diet was formulated to be isocaloric and isonitrogenous at 14% CP and was ryegrass hay based, and top dressed with ground corn as a carrier. The TRT received the yeast supplement at a rate of 4/g/h/d. The diet was offered at 2% of the group's body weight ad libitum. A 1-wk standardization period was conducted before the start of the study to obtain a 5% refusal rate. Orts were collected and recorded, as well as weekly feed samples were collected twice a week, and compiled for a chemical analysis for NDF, ADF, ASH, CP, and ether extract. Temperature and humidity data was also collected throughout the study. Lambs were weighed weekly with a rolling weight being used for the ADG of the lambs. Proc mixed procedures of SAS was used for data analysis. We found no statistical significance in DMI (CON=11.14 ±3.36 kg/d and TRT= 10.89 ±3.55 kg/d per group), and no statistical significance by gender (P < 0.11). There was a statistical significance (P < 0.03), for ADG per group. This suggests that there is a tendency for greater performance and ADG for lambs supplemented with a yeast fermentation product.
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source Oxford University Press Journals All Titles (1996-Current); EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals; PubMed Central
subjects Body temperature
Body weight
Chemical analysis
Corn
Data analysis
Diet
Digestibility
Dirt
Feed additives
Feeds
Fermentation
Grasses
Hay
Meat
Organic chemistry
Rye
Sheep
Standardization
Statistical methods
Statistical significance
Statistics
Yeast
Yeasts
title The effects of a yeast fermentation product on the average daily gain and digestibility on a rye grass hay based finishing diet for lambs
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