FORTIFICATION OF CASSAVA PEEL MEALS IN BALANCED DIETS FOR RABBITS

Authors

  • J. A. AGUNBIADE College of Agricultural Sciences, Ogun State University, Ago-woye, Ogun State, Nigeria
  • A. O. ADEYEMI College of Agricultural Sciences, Ogun State University, Ago-Iwoye, Nigeria
  • O. E. FASINA College of Agricultural Sciences, Ogun State University, Ago-woye, Ogun State, Nigeria
  • S. A. BAGBE College of Agricultural Sciences, Ogun State University, Ago-Iwoye, Nigeria

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.51791/njap.v28i2.1901

Keywords:

Rabbit performance, cassava peel meal, palm kernel cake, soyabeans, extrusion

Abstract

An eight-week feeding trial was conducted with twenty-four individually caged growing rabbits weighing initially 300--380g. Six experimental diets were formulated such that diet 1 was a maize-soyabean based control while in diets 2,3,4, 5 and 6, cassava peel meal totally replaced maize. There was also a stepwise reduction in the quantity of soyabean meal utilised in diets 3, 4 and S while the quantity of palm kernel cake was increased. Diet 6 was an extruded version of diet 4. The diets were fortified with palm oil for energy and soyabean and palm kernel cake for protein. Each diet was fed to four replicates of rabbits consisting of one rabbit per replicate and water was supplied ad ibitum. Feed intake, weight-gain and feed cost/unit weight-gain were significantly affected by dietary treatments (P<0.05) while treatments had no effect on water intake and Feed: Gain ratio (P>0.05). The feed cost was reduced to N13.8/kg in diet 5 compared with N17.8 in the control diet. 'The extrusion process was not efficient in all indices of measurement as rabbits on the diet showed poor performance. A major finding of the study is that up to 50% of the protein supplied by soyabean meal when fed in conjunction with cassava peel meal can be replaced with palm kernel cake without adverse effects. It is recommended that future studies look into alternatives to palm oil as energy booster in diets containing cassava peel meal so as to further improve the economy of feed utilization.

Author Biographies

J. A. AGUNBIADE, College of Agricultural Sciences, Ogun State University, Ago-woye, Ogun State, Nigeria

Department of Animal Production, Faculty of Agricultural Production and Renewable Resources

A. O. ADEYEMI, College of Agricultural Sciences, Ogun State University, Ago-Iwoye, Nigeria

Department of Animal Production, Faculty of Agricultural Production and Renewable Resources

O. E. FASINA, College of Agricultural Sciences, Ogun State University, Ago-woye, Ogun State, Nigeria

Department of Animal Production, Faculty of Agricultural Production and Renewable Resources

S. A. BAGBE, College of Agricultural Sciences, Ogun State University, Ago-Iwoye, Nigeria

Department of Animal Production, Faculty of Agricultural Production and Renewable Resources

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Published

2021-01-04

How to Cite

AGUNBIADE, J. A., ADEYEMI, A. O., FASINA, O. E., & BAGBE, S. A. (2021). FORTIFICATION OF CASSAVA PEEL MEALS IN BALANCED DIETS FOR RABBITS. Nigerian Journal of Animal Production, 28(2), 167–173. https://doi.org/10.51791/njap.v28i2.1901

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