In vitro assessment of nutritive value of date palm by-products as feed for ruminants

Authors

  • Souhil Boufennara 1 Département de Biologie Moléculaire et Cellulaire, Faculté des Sciences de la Nature et de la vie, Université Abbès Laghrour de Khenchela, 40000 Khenchela, Algeria
  • Lyas Bouazza Département de Biologie Moléculaire et Cellulaire, Faculté des Sciences de la Nature et de la vie, Université Abbès Laghrour de Khenchela, 40000 Khenchela, Algeria
  • Antonio de Vega Departamento de Producción Animal y Ciencia de los Alimentos, Instituto Agroalimentario de Aragón-IA2- (Universidad de Zaragoza-CITA), Miguel Servet 177, 50013, Zaragoza, Spain,
  • Manuel Fondevila Departamento de Producción Animal y Ciencia de los Alimentos, Instituto Agroalimentario de Aragón-IA2- (Universidad de Zaragoza-CITA), Miguel Servet 177, 50013, Zaragoza, Spain
  • Zahia Amanzougarene Departamento de Producción Animal y Ciencia de los Alimentos, Instituto Agroalimentario de Aragón-IA2- (Universidad de Zaragoza-CITA), Miguel Servet 177, 50013, Zaragoza, Spain
  • Secundino Lopez 3 Instituto de Ganadería de Montaña (IGM) CSIC-Universidad de León, Departamento de Producción Animal, Universidad de Léon, 24007 León, Spain

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.9755/ejfa.2016-01-104

Keywords:

By products; Chemical composition; In vitro fermentation; Nutritive value; Rumen

Abstract

Date-palm leaves, pedicels, date-pits and waste dates are date-palm by-products (DPBP), routinely used as a feed resource by oasis
farmers. This work aims to assess in vitro the chemical composition and nutritional value of these DPBP, including waste dates from three
varieties (Bouarus, Harchaya and Kentichi). Vetch-oat hay was used as a reference feed material. Palm leaves showed the highest NDF,
ADF, lignin and crude protein contents (609, 435, 84, 64 g kg-1 DM, respectively). Cumulative gas production at 144 h of incubation
was greatest for Kentichi dates (330 mL g-1DM) and lowest for date-pits (69 mL g-1DM). Regardless of the variety, waste dates showed
the highest DM effective ruminal degradability (ED=0.48-0.49; estimated for a passage rate of 0.03 h-1) and organic matter digestibility
(OMD), whereas date-pits seemed to be a poorly degradable material, with an ED coefficient of 0.09 g g-1 DM. The lowest total VFA
production from ruminal fermentation was with date-pits and the highest with waste dates of the Bouarus variety. These results suggest
that waste dates, albeit their low protein content, should be considered highly digestible with energy concentrations as high as that of
vetch-oat hay. Palm leaves and pedicels can be considered as highly fibrous emergency roughages for low-producing animals. When DPBP
are used as feedstuffs, protein supplements will be necessary to balance the ruminant diets.

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Published

2016-11-28

How to Cite

Boufennara, S., L. Bouazza, A. de Vega, M. Fondevila, Z. Amanzougarene, and S. Lopez. “In Vitro Assessment of Nutritive Value of Date Palm by-Products As Feed for Ruminants”. Emirates Journal of Food and Agriculture, vol. 28, no. 10, Nov. 2016, pp. 695-03, doi:10.9755/ejfa.2016-01-104.

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Section

Regular Articles