Body composition of goat kids during sucking. Voluntary feed intake

The body composition of thirty-eight Granadina goat kids was measured. Six animals were slaughtered at birth while the remainder were kept individually at an environmental temperature of 24±2° and a relative humidity of 60±5%. They were given goat's milk or a milk-substitute at two planes of nutrition until 15 or 30 d of age and then slaughtered. The goat's milk and milk-substitute contained 260.4 and 222.0 g digestible protein/kg and 23.23 and 20.85 MJ metabolizable energy/kg respectively. Voluntary feed intake as metabolizable energy was a function of metabolic body-weight (kg W0.75), equivalent to 2.42 and 2.44 times the energy requirement for maintenance for goat's milk- and milk-substitute-fed animals respectively. There was a high degree of correlation between the empty-body concentration of dry matter, fat and energy and empty-body-weight (P < 0.001) or animal age (P < 0.001), and between body-weight and animal age (P < 0.001). The relationships between empty-body composition and empty-body-weight were independent of type of milk or plane of nutrition. In contrast relationships between empty-body composition or empty-body-weight and animal age were affected by the type of milk and, over all, by the plane of nutrition. All these results show that in these animals any body-weight will have a similar composition, but it will be reached earlier or later depending on dietary regimen and always with the limitation of voluntary intake.

[1]  J. Boza,et al.  Energy metabolism of the Granadina breed goat kid. Use of goat milk and a milk replacer , 1988 .

[2]  J. Boza,et al.  Factors affecting pre- and post-weaning growth and body composition in kid goats of the Granadina breed , 1987 .

[3]  D. M. Walker Body composition of animals during sucking and the immediate post-weaning period , 1986, The Proceedings of the Nutrition Society.

[4]  P. Morand-Fehr,et al.  Development and characteristics of adipose deposits in male kids during growth from birth to weaning , 1985 .

[5]  J. Roy,et al.  The effect of milk substitute concentration upon the intake, digestion and growth of calves , 1985 .

[6]  S. A. Spencer,et al.  The effect of over-feeding newborn rabbits on somatic and visceral growth, body composition and long-term growth potential , 1984, British Journal of Nutrition.

[7]  K. Jagusch,et al.  Efficiency of goat milk utilisation by milk-fed kids , 1983 .

[8]  R. Campbell,et al.  The effects of energy intake and dietary protein on nitrogen retention, growth performance, body composition and some aspects of energy metabolism of baby pigs , 1983, British Journal of Nutrition.

[9]  M. Vermorel,et al.  ENERGY UTILIZATION BY GROWING CALVES: EFFECTS OF AGE, MILK INTAKE AND FEEDING LEVEL , 1980 .

[10]  J. F. Gálvez,et al.  Body Composition in Suckling Rabbits , 1978 .

[11]  R. Hodge Efficiency of food conversion and body composition of the preruminant lamb and the young pig , 1974, British Journal of Nutrition.

[12]  K. Jagusch,et al.  Body composition studies with the milk-fed lamb. III. The effect of the protein and energy intake on the composition of the live-weight gain , 1970, The Journal of Agricultural Science.

[13]  Jagusch Kt Body composition studies with the milk-fed lamb , 1968 .