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Seasonal effects of Rhus lancea and Celtis africana on intake preference and physiological responses in South African indigenous goats

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dc.contributor.author Phiri, France
dc.contributor.author Kanengoni, A.T.
dc.contributor.author Hattas, D.
dc.contributor.author Mbatha, K.R.
dc.contributor.author Kanengoni, a. T.
dc.date.accessioned 2023-06-13T07:41:11Z
dc.date.available 2023-06-13T07:41:11Z
dc.date.issued 2022-07-16
dc.identifier.citation Phiri, F., Kanengoni, A.D., Hattas, D., Mbatha, K.R. 2022. Seasonal effects of Rhus lancea and Celtis africana on intake, preference, and physiological responses in South African indigenous goats. S. Afri. J. Anim. Sci 52(6):900-9013. en
dc.identifier.issn 2221-4062
dc.identifier.uri https://www.ajol.info/index.php/sajas/article/view/245982
dc.identifier.uri https://hdl.handle.net/10500/30158
dc.description.abstract This study investigated the seasonal effects of Rhus lancea and Celtis africana leaves on preference, intake, weight, and serum metabolites in South African indigenous, mature, male goats. Twelve mature, male goats weighing 34 ± 5.9 kg (mean ± SD) were randomly allocated to two groups of six and kept in metabolic crates for periods of 21 days in October 2015 and March, May, and August of 2016. A browser diet of R. lancea and C. africana and a control diet (lucerne and concentrates) were randomly allocated to each group. Measurements taken included nutritional composition of browse per season, and browse preference, intake, weight changes, and serum metabolites in the goats. The acid detergent fibre (24–36%) and neutral detergent fibre (26.9–70.4 %) in R. lancea over the months were greater than in C. africana (50.3–53.2% and 49.4–55.4%, respectively). In the preference study, the goats preferred C. africana more in October (51.2 vs 48.8%), March (51.4 vs 48.6%), and May (54.3 vs 45.7%). Goats on the browser diet lost weight in March, May, and in August whereas those on the control diet gained weight. The serum urea concentration of goats consuming browser diets in May and August (1.8–3.3 mmol/l) was lower than the normal range, consistent with animals failing to derive their protein requirements from the diet. Goats prefer to browse C. africana more than R. lancea. The study also indicated the need for supplementation to meet maintenance requirements in animals fed R. lancea and C. africana. en
dc.language.iso en en
dc.publisher South African Society for Animal Science en
dc.subject serum metabolites en
dc.subject condensed tannins en
dc.subject fibre en
dc.subject maintenance en
dc.subject small ruminants en
dc.title Seasonal effects of Rhus lancea and Celtis africana on intake preference and physiological responses in South African indigenous goats en
dc.type Article en
dc.description.department College of Agriculture and Environmental Sciences en


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