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Intake of Spineless Cladodes ofOpuntia ficus-indicaDuring Late Pregnancy Improves Progeny Performance in Underfed Sheep

Authors

Cuevas Reyes, Venancio , Santiago Hernandez, Francisco , Flores Najera, Manuel de Jesus , Vazquez Garcia, Juan Manuel , Urrutia Morales, Jorge , Hosseini-Ghaffari, Morteza , Chay-Canul, Alfonso , Meza-Herrera, Cesar A. , Gonzalez-Bulnes, Antonio , Martin, Graeme B. , Rosales Nieto, Cesar A.

External publication

No

Means

Animals

Scope

Article

Nature

Científica

JCR Quartile

SJR Quartile

JCR Impact

2.752

SJR Impact

0.584

Publication date

01/06/2020

ISI

000554932400001

Abstract

Simple Summary Plants in theOpuntiagenus are abundant and can be used as a feed supplement because they are highly digestible and can provide water and energy. We fed sheep during late gestation with alfalfa (Control),Opuntia(Opuntia) or protein-enrichedOpuntia(E-Opuntia) and measured milk yield and postnatal growth in the progeny. Birth weight did not differ among treatments (p> 0.05) but progeny from E-Opuntia grew faster (p< 0.01) and were heavier at weaning (p< 0.05), despite the fact that Control ewes produced more milk (p< 0.05). Feeding ewes withOpuntia(protein enriched or not) during the last third of gestation is an option for reducing production costs in underfed females managed under extensive conditions in arid and semiarid regions. The present study tested whether feeding ewes during the last third of pregnancy with cladodes ofOpuntia(untreated or protein-enriched), as an alternative to alfalfa hay, would improve milk yield as well as the pre- and post-natal growth of their lambs. Sixty mature Rambouillet ewes and their progeny were randomly allocated among three nutritional treatments: (i) Control, fed alfalfa; (ii) Opuntia, fed untreated cladodes; (iii) E-Opuntia, fed protein-enriched cladodes (pre-treated with urea and ammonium sulphate). Birth weight did not differ among treatments (p> 0.05) but Control ewes produced more milk than both groups ofOpuntia-fed ewes (p< 0.05). However, milk yield was not related to the growth of the progeny (p> 0.05) because lambs from E-Opuntia-fed ewes grew faster (p< 0.01) and were heavier at weaning (p< 0.05) than lambs from the other two groups. We conclude thatOpuntia(with or without protein enrichment) can be used as an alternative to alfalfa hay for feeding ewes during the last third of pregnancy and therefore reduce production costs under extensive conditions in arid and semiarid regions. Moreover, protein-enriched Opuntia appears to improve postnatal lamb growth.

Keywords

birth weight; cactus; Opuntiaspp; postnatal performance; sheep