Abstract
A 60-day feeding trial was conducted with 40 growing West African Dwarf bucks aged 5–7 months with an initial average weight of 5.25 kg ± 0.35 to determine their hematological and serum biochemical parameters. The goats were randomly allocated to five treatments namely: T1 (100% urea-treated cassava peel), T2 (60% untreated cassava peel + 40% cassava foliage), T3 (60% untreated cassava peel + 40% poultry manure), T4 (60% untreated cassava peel + 20% cassava foliage + 20% treated cassava peel), and T5 (60% untreated cassava peel + 20% cassava foliage + 20% poultry manure) in a complete randomized design. Each treatment was split into eight replicates. At the end of the feeding trial, blood samples were collected from four goats per treatment to evaluate the following hematological indices: packed cell volume (PCV), red blood cell (RBC), white blood cell (WBC), hemoglobin, mean corpuscular volume (MCV), mean corpuscular hemoglobin (MCH), and MCH concentration (MCHC). Serum parameters determined were total protein (g/dL), albumin (g/dL), globulin (g/dL), creatinine (mg/dL), alkaline phosphatase (ALP) (iu/L), alanine transaminase (ALT) (iu/L), aspartate aminotransferase (AST) (iu/L), and urea (iu/L). PCV, RBC and WBC showed significant (P 0.05). Serum biochemical parameters indicated that total protein ranged from 4.10 to 5.18 g/dL, albumin: 1.90–2.55 g/dL, creatinine: 0.08–1.28 mg/dL, ALP: 53.18–96.95 iu/L, ALT: 138.75–176.50 iu/L, globulin: 2.20–3.03 iu/L, AST: 16.18–17.58 iu/L, and urea: 17.60–23.75 iu/L. All the values obtained for hematological and serum biochemical parameters were within the normal ranges for growing goats. This indicates that feeding of cassava peel with supplemental nitrogen sources had no deleterious effect on the body physiology and health of the animals.
Highlights
Et al.: Haematology and serum biochemistry of growing West African Dwarf goats fed cassava peel enriched with supplemental nitrogen the diet of monogastric animals.[3]
The study sought to determine the influence of cassava peel with supplemented nitrogen sources on the hematology and the serum biochemistry of West African dwarf (WAD) goat
The highest red blood cell (RBC) value obtained in treatment 5 shows the nutritional quality of cassava peels, cassava leaves, and poultry manure diet when fed to WAD goats
Summary
Nutrition is the most important consideration in any livestock enterprise. The survival of the livestock industry is dependent on the availability of feedstuffs, which are mainly components of human food.[1]. The aim of keeping livestock is for the production of high-quality protein.
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