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handle: 10261/10051
Thirty six Merino lambs with average initial live weight of 13.5 kg (SE ± 0.56 kg) were used in a 3×3 factorial arrangement (4 lambs per group). The treatments were three concentrate supplements (barley [B], barley 82.5% plus soybean meal 14.5% [BSM] and barley 82.5% plus meat meal 14.5% [BMM]) and three slaughter weights (20, 25 and 30 kg live weight). The lambs fed the B diet consumed less concentrate supplement (0.701 vs. 0.780b and 0.758b kg DM day−1, P0.05) in crude protein intake between BSM and BMM. (171.0 vs. 179.7 g crude protein day−1). The source of dietary protein (soybean meal vs. meat meal) did not have a significant influence (P>0.05) on performance and chemical body composition of lambs. The interactions between the effect of slaughter weight and the concentrate supplement were non-significant (P>0.05). This study suggests that meat meal can successfully replace soybean meal as a protein supplement for growing lambs from weaning to 30 kg live weight and offer an alternative to soybean meal as a regional protein source for lamb diets.
7 pages, 5 figures.-- Available online Jun 16, 1998.
Peer reviewed
Soybean meal, Growth, Lambs, Meat meal, Body composition
Soybean meal, Growth, Lambs, Meat meal, Body composition
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