2005
DOI: 10.1016/j.smallrumres.2004.10.008
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Effect of replacing urea with fish meal in finishing diet on performance of Awassi lamb under heat stress

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Cited by 8 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…In this study, the negative effect of WCS was not observed in Awassi lambs because low levels of WCS were used. The ADG of 8.5% WCS group (268 g/d) had similar values to former studies of Can et al (2004) and Can et al (2005) with the same breed under similar conditions.…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 84%
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“…In this study, the negative effect of WCS was not observed in Awassi lambs because low levels of WCS were used. The ADG of 8.5% WCS group (268 g/d) had similar values to former studies of Can et al (2004) and Can et al (2005) with the same breed under similar conditions.…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 84%
“…Additionally, Luginbuhl et al (2000) reported that with increasing WCS level in diets of male goats, serum urea concentration increased. Glucose, urea and total protein levels of lambs were similar in a former study by Can et al (2005).…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 79%
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“…This proposed mechanism is consistent with the decreased BUN in GLU-fed lambs in both thermal regimes (Table 3). In contrast, other nutritional strategies such as adding bypass protein (Bunting et al, 1992;Can et al, 2005) or supplemental fat (Caroprese et al, 2012) failed to affect core body temperature. It should be noted that the GLU product contained some niacin, and (although results vary) niacin has been shown to reduce body temperature in lactating heat-stressed cows (Zimbelman et al, 2010;Rungruang et al, 2014).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 84%
“…Authors attributed these differences to improved nutrient (NDF and CP) digestibilities when lambs or calves consumed diets containing high levels of RUP as compared to low levels of RUP. Can et al (2005) reported that rate of growth and efficiency were improved in lambs fed a diet containing bypass protein (fishmeal) when compared to rumen degradable protein in lambs fed finishing diets. These results are in agreement with others (Orskov et al, 1970;Beermann et al, 1986) who demonstrated that bypass protein that came from fishmeal enhanced the rate of growth of lambs more than diets containing plant protein sources.…”
Section: Experiments 2: Fattening Awassi Lambs Fed Finishing Dietsmentioning
confidence: 99%