Abstract

A comparative slaughter trial was conducted to determine the protein requirements for maintenance and growth of feedlot Texel crossbred lambs. Thirty 11/16 Texel × 5/16 Ile de France crossbred noncastrated male lambs weaned at 42 days of age (16.2 ± 2.1 kg of shrunk body weight; SBW) were used. Five lambs were chosen randomly and slaughtered after 10 days of experimental management and diet adaptation (baseline group). Fifteen lambs were fed ad libitum and slaughtered at 25, 30 or 35 kg of SBW. The remaining 10 lambs were then assigned randomly to two levels of dry matter intake, either 70 or 55% of the ad libitum intake, and were slaughtered concomitantly with lambs slaughtered at 35 kg of SBW but given free choice access to feed. Total body N content and retention were determined. Additionally, six Texel × Ile de France crossbred lambs (30.4 ± 2.6 kg of SBW) housed in individual metabolic cages were used in a replicated 3 × 3 Latin square digestibility trial to evaluate diet digestibility and microbial protein synthesis at the different levels of feed intake. The endogenous N loss was 243 ± 29 mg/kg 0.75 of SBW, corresponding to a net protein requirement for maintenance of 1.52 ± 0.18 g/kg 0.75 of SBW. The metabolizable protein (MP) requirement for maintenance was 2.31 g/kg 0.75 of SBW, and the efficiency of MP use for maintenance was 0.66. Fleece-free body protein content decreased from 163 to 155 g/kg of empty body weight (EBW) as EBW increased from 13 to 28 kg. However, when protein in fleece was considered the whole-body protein content remained nearly constant. Net protein requirements for body weight gain and wool growth of lambs at 15 and 35 kg of SBW, and an average daily gain of 250 g, were 28.7 and 27.3 g/day and 3.8 and 5.8 g/day, respectively. Estimated efficiencies of MP use for body weight gain ( k pg) and wool growth ( k pw) were, respectively, 0.71 and 0.46. Growth pattern of the wool has a high influence on protein requirements of lambs. Texel crossbred growing lambs used in our study showed protein requirements for growth lower than those reported by the most nutritional systems.

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