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Turkish Journal of Veterinary and Animal Sciences

The Effect of Concentrate- and Silage-Based Finishing Diets on the Growth Performance and Carcass Characteristics of Suffolk Cross and Scottish Blackface Lambs

Muhammad I. MUSTAFA1, John P. CHADWICK1, Pervez AKHTAR2, Safdar ALI2, Muhammad LATEEF2, Javed I. SULTAN2
1Department of Agriculture, University of Newcastle, Newcastle upon Tyne NE1 7RU - UNITED KINGDOM
2Faculty of Animal Husbandry, University of Agriculture, Faisalabad - PAKISTAN

Abstract: In the present study 48 Suffolk x Mule (S x M) and 48 Scottish Blackface (SBF) wether lambs were used in a 2 breeds x 2 diets x 4 replications factorial experiment with 6 lambs per pen. Lambs were offered either a concentrate (CONC) finishing diet (DM: 876 g kg-1, estimated ME: 10.9 MJ kg-1 of DM, estimated DUP: 32.4 g kg{-1} of DM) ad libitum, together with 100 g hay head-1 day-1, or silage (SIL) offered ad libitum (D value: 67.2), together with up to 450 g head-1day-1of a concentrate supplement (DM: 888 g kg-1, estimated ME: 10.9 MJ kg-1 of DM, estimated DUP: 63.9 g kg-1 of DM). Lambs were slaughtered at estimated MLC fat class 2 to 3L. Both breed and diet had a significant effect on daily live weight gain (DLWG) (S x M: 282 vs. SBF: 210 g; CONC: 383 vs. SIL: 109 g) and the food conversion ratio (FCR) was significantly affected by diet (CONC: 5.3 vs. SIL: 7.7). Breed x diet interactions were significant for both DLWG and FCR. Conformation score was better in the S x M lambs than in the SBF lambs (3.2 vs. 2.6; scale E = 5, P = 1), whereas diet influenced the estimated subcutaneous fat proportion (CONC: 121.5 g kg-1vs. SIL: 113.2 g kg-1).

Key Words: Lamb, breed, diet, growth, carcass


Turk. J. Vet. Anim. Sci. 2008; 32: 191-197.
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Other articles published in the same issue: Turk. J. Vet. Anim. Sci.,vol.32,iss.3.