Abstract

BackgroundThis study aims to investigate the reproduction output of Archachatina marginata fed on roughage and concentrate feed with leaf meal-inclusive diets. One hundred fifty points of lay snails weighing between 150 and 170 g were randomly allotted to 5 treatment diets with three replicates, ten snails per replicate, designated as treatment 2 (GNCD) which has groundnut cake, treatment 3 (GLLM) has Gliricidia sepium, treatment 4 (MOLM) has Moringa oleifera, and treatment 5 (LLLM) has Leucaena leucocephala leaf meals as protein source in snail diet and a control (treatment 1) (UPWP) fed on roughage (unripe pawpaw and watermelon peel) in a 12-week feed trial. Feed intake, weight gain, egg lay, egg fertility, hatchability, and gonadosomatic index were measured.ResultsThe result revealed snails fed with UPWP had the least final weight and weight gain which was accompanied by the highest feed intake across the treatments. Average egg laid, hatchability, fertility, embryo mortality, and average juvenile produced by snails on roughage-based diet were significantly the least across the treatments. High gonadosomatic index of snails on leaf meal-based diet accompanied with better reproductive output in laying snails was recorded.ConclusionSnails fed with Leucaena leucocephala-inclusive diet had better egg production, fertility, hatchability, and juvenile snails accompanied with gonadosomatic index across the treatments. Concentrate ration is essential for optimal reproductive output in snails.

Highlights

  • This study aims to investigate the reproduction output of Archachatina marginata fed on roughage and concentrate feed with leaf meal-inclusive diets

  • Leucaena leucocephala, and Gliricidia sepium leaf meals were obtained from pasture and forage fields within the teaching and research farm premises

  • The trend reveals that snails fed with Unripe pawpaw and watermelon peel (UPWP) had the least final weight and weight gain which was accompanied by the highest feed intake across the treatments

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Summary

Introduction

This study aims to investigate the reproduction output of Archachatina marginata fed on roughage and concentrate feed with leaf meal-inclusive diets. Large-scale snail farming of African giant land snail (Archachatina marginata) has paved way for it in the international market as well as meeting people’s demand for the snail in the local market to the protein intake of the populace (Ejidike and Afolayan 2010). Limitation of rearing snails includes their very slow growth rate and seasonal breeding pattern, severely limiting their productivity (Eze et al 2010). This indicates the importance of intensive management and nutrition to induce profitability in snail farming. Concentrate feed or supplements is necessary to optimize the growth and

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