Abstract

A study was conducted to evaluate the potential of macadamia oil cake meal (MOCM) and wood ash as feed ingredients for poultry under subsistence farming conditions. In this article, the effect of these ingredients on bone characteristics is reported. Two hundred and eighty eight day-old New Hampshire chickens were used in the study. The research was conducted as a 3 x 2 factorial design, and 48 chicks were randomly allocated per treatment. Three basic diets were formulated: one without MOCM and the other two containing 10% and 50% MOCM. The MOCM contained 132 g/kg of crude protein, 228 g/kg crude fat and 365 g/kg crude fibre on an ‘as-fed’ basis. Each of these three treatments was split into two: one receiving feed lime (CaCO3) as the main source of calcium; and the other wood ash, which contained 257 g Ca/kg. All diets contained a Ca level of ca. 10 g/kg. The chickens received the experimental diets from 2 to 15 weeks of age. After week 15, eight chickens per treatment were killed and their right legs removed at the femorotibial articulation and frozen for later evaluation. Between Ca sources there were no significant differences in tibia weight, diameter, volume, density and breaking strength. The ash content and Ca, P and Mg concentrations in bone ash between Ca sources were similar. However, in the two Ca diets containing 50% MOCM the Ca and P concentrations of the tibiae were significantly lower than in the diets containing lower levels of MOCM. It was concluded that wood ash was as effective as feed lime in supplying Ca to chickens. However, some practical problems in the feeding of wood ash became apparent, such as that wood ash is a fine powder and does not mix well with other ingredients, except when the oil content of the diet is high, as with the treatments containing MOCM.

Highlights

  • It would be advantageous to resource-poor poultry farmers under subsistence farming conditions if cheap and readily available feedstuffs could be identified to be included in the diets of their chickens

  • The chemical composition of the macadamia oil cake meal (MOCM) used in this study (Table 3) indicated that the MOCM

  • This is lower than the mean of 209 ± 53.3 g CP/kg dry matter (DM) (n = 8), reported by Skenjana

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Summary

Introduction

It would be advantageous to resource-poor poultry farmers under subsistence farming conditions if cheap and readily available feedstuffs could be identified to be included in the diets of their chickens. Macadamia oil cake meal (MOCM), the residue after removal of the oil from the nuts, is a so-called opportunity feedstuff that would be accessible to subsistence farmers in the vicinity of macadamia processing plants. Mineral supplements for livestock are not always readily available to resource-poor farmers under subsistence farming conditions. There has been limited research conducted on the potential of wood ash as a mineral source for animals, though wood ash showed promise as a mineral supplement to sheep in the tropics (Imbeah, 1999)

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