Abstract

This study was conducted to evaluate the effects of using different dietary forage-to-concentrate ratios on growth performance and carcass characteristics of eighty Chall male fat-tailed lambs, averaging 165±15 (SD) days of age and body weight of 38.4±4.8 (SD) kg, randomly assigned to four diets containing alfalfa hay-to-concentrate ratios (DM basis) of 70:30 (C30), 50:50 (C50), 30:70 (C70), 10:90 (C90). Metabolizable energy (ME) contents were, 9.12. 9.96, 10.67, and 11.34MJ/kg dry matter (DM) and crude protein (CP) contents were 143, 152, 161, and 174g/kg for the C30, C50, C70, and C90 diets, respectively. Sixteen lambs (4 lambs/treatment) were slaughtered at the end of feeding period (84 days). Dry matter intake and feed conversion ratio (FCR) (i.e., kgDM/kggain) decreased linearly (P<0.001) as concentrate level increased in the diet. However, a linear increase (P<0.001) for ME intake and a quadratic increase for average daily gain (ADG, P<0.001) and final body weight (P<0.01) were observed with increasing dietary concentrate. Slaughter weight, eye muscle area, and weights of lean, bone, neck, shoulder, rack–loin, leg, skin, head, lung, and spleen were not affected by the experimental diets. However, as dietary concentrate increased, a linear increase for dressing percentage, feet weight (P<0.001), and backfat thickness (P<0.02), a quadratic increase for empty body weight (EBW, P<0.02), weights of hot and cold carcass (P<0.001), subcutaneous fat (P<0.02), total fat (P<0.01), brisket–flank (P<0.04), and tail fat (P<0.001), a linear decrease for weights of liver (P<0.01), and heart (P<0.05), and a quadratic decrease for lean-to-fat ratio (P<0.02) were observed. This study indicates that in Chall fat-tailed lambs the increase of dietary concentrate (up to 700g/kg) improves growth rate, FCR and dressing percentage with negative effect on carcass lean-to-fat ratio.

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