Abstract

In Kenya, Mulberry is grown in less than a piece of an acre by most of the farmers. Current acreage of mulberry stands at 250, spread over Western, Nyanza, and Rift Valley and Coastal regions. Mulberry leaves are highly palatable and digestible (70-90%) to ruminants and can be fed to non-ruminants as part of feed ingredient. Protein content and essential amino acid profile in the leaves and young stems varies from 15 to 35% depending on the variety. The Mulberry leaves are highly applicable as supplements replacing concentrates for dairy cattle, as the main feed for goats and sheep, and as an ingredient in rabbits and pigs’ diets. Farmers growing mulberry fodder offer higher protein content to livestock than those relying on different varieties of Napier grass, which have failed to boost milk production despite the amounts fed. In non-ruminant production, fishmeal and soybean meals are the main source of protein. In ruminant production, cottonseed meal and canola meal are the main source of protein. These meals are expensive, inadequate in supply and of variable quality. This often leads to low egg production and poor-quality eggs, hence low income and poverty among farmers. Therefore, efforts have been made to identify locally available protein feed resources that can be used as a protein supplement for livestock. Mulberry leaf meal (MLM) has been identified as a locally available alternative protein and mineral source that are beneficial to livestock and have been proven to improve production. Int. J. Agril. Res. Innov. Tech. 11(2): 1-9, Dec 2021

Highlights

  • Nutrition is of major influence in livestock production

  • The feed industry in Kenya largely relies on imported feed ingredients like maize, maize germ/bran, wheat bran and pollard, soybean and its derivatives, sunflower cake, copra cakes, cottonseed cake, fish meal, and micro-ingredients from the East African Community (EAC), Southern African Developing Countries (SADC) regional market and other international markets (Oloo, 2010)

  • Mulberry leaves are used as a feed ingredient in non-ruminant nutrition

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Summary

Introduction

Nutrition is of major influence in livestock production. Main livestock species kept in Kenya include cattle (18 million), sheep (18 million), goats (28 million), camels (3 million), pigs (334,689) and poultry (31 million) (KNBS, 2010). According to Thornton (2010), developing countries' share of worldwide use of cereals for animal feed nearly doubled (to 36%) from the first 1908s to the late 1990s. These foodstuffs are inadequate, and their incorporation in feeds makes them expensive while the low-quality ones are mainly utilized in animal feed manufacture. Type II diabetes mellitus can be managed by taking a mixture containing black mulberry fruit and water. Xanthophylls are good source of the pigmentation of egg yolk It contains minerals and β-glucans that are beneficial to livestock and have been proven to improve average daily gain, dry matter, and energy of nutrient digestibility in weaned pigs. Feeding Mulberry leaves causes an increase in body weight gains in growing lambs and goats as well as an increase in milk quality and quantity in dairy cows

Mulberry plant
Varieties of mulberry
Benefits of mulberry
Nutritive value of mulberry leaves
Amino Acid
Use of mulberry leaves in ruminant nutrition
Limitations of mulberry
Findings
Conclusion
Full Text
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