ANIMAL NUTRITION
The food given to farm animal is generally known as livestock feed simply feed. Farm animal need feed for growth, repair of worn out tissues, energy and the general wellbeing of the animals.
Effects of feed shortage in animal production
Feed shortage will lead to the following effects in animal production
reduction in livestock production
Classification of livestock feed
Animal feed can be grouped into four main classes. These are:
Characteristics: (i) A Basal/Energy concentrate is the feed that has crude fibre content less than 18%
(ii) Basal feed refers to feed that are very high in energy or a starchy food e.g. maize, cassava, etc.
(iii) It is high in carbohydrates or fats
18%
Hey and straw are referred to as dry roughages
Preparation of silage
sun for about one day
which can cause spoilage
Method of preparing feed ingredients
open. Heat the blood to reduce the moisture content and kill the pathogens. After heating, the blood now in lumps is dried and crushed into powder.
processes
than ground it into powder
crush into powder
crush, and press to remove the oil. Then press the remnants with machines to form cakes, which are dried
crushed seeds. Dry the residue or cake later
processes
burnt bones to the desired texture
crush and dry the crushed bones
to desired texture.
Feed ingredient can be prepared or processed for farm animal by making
Into mash and pellets while some have to be cooked before it can be fed to farm animals.
Food nutrients of livestock
There are six classes of food nutrients which are needed by animals for growth and proper development. These are:
Composition: Carbohydrate is made up of carbon, hydrogen and oxygen
Sources: This include maize, guinea corn, cassava, grasses, wheat, potatoes, rice, millet, yam, Cocoyam, plantain, forage grasses, Hey, silage, molasses, spent grains etc.
Functions: Carbohydrate provide energy to farm animals for growth, reproduction, milk production and other activities like build-up of fat.
Composition: Protein is composed of carbon, hydrogen, oxygen and sometimes sulphur, nitrogen and phosphorus.
Sources
Animal sources of proteins are fish meal, blood meal, meat meal, feather meal, milk, skimmed milk powder, poultry offal meal, shrimp head meal, whole milk powder, cholesterol, termite, insects, earthworms, eggs etc.
Plant sources of proteins are soya-beans meal, groundnut cake, palm kernel cake, cotton seed meal, sunflower seed meal, cashew nut meal, leguminous forage.
Synthetic sources of protein are methionine, lysine and cysteine which are critical or essential. Amino acids can also be provided.
Functions
animal
livestock
nails, horns, hoof, wool and feathers etc.
the intestine
Composition: fats are composed of carbon, hydrogen and oxygen
Sources: These are palm oil, palm kernel cake, groundnut cake, coconut meal, linseed cake, cotton seed cake, milk, lard, tallow.
Function
Composition: Minerals required by animals are grouped into two major classes:
Sources: These are bone meal, oyster shell, limestone, salt licks
MINERAL | SOURCES | FUNCTIONS | DEFICIENCY SYMPTOMS |
Calcium | Bone meal, oyster shell limestone. Milk rock calcium phosphate | Bone and teeth formation egg shell formation. Blood clotting | Ricket, osteomalacia, soft egg shell. Retarded growth |
Phosphorus | Bone meal, Dicalcium phosphate, fish meal | Bone and teeth formation; acid-base balance; egg shell formation | Ricket, lack of appetite osteomalcia |
Magnesium | Salt licks, wheat gems, forage, grasses | Aid functioning of the nervous system activation of enzymes | Hyper-irritability, nervous disorder called tetany |
Sulphur | Salt licks, fish meal | Constituents of protein and amino acids like cysteine, methione | Poor growth |
Iron | Yeast, iron injection, salt licks | Constituent of haemoglobin in red blood cell. Constituent of protein called myoglobuline | Anaemia e.g. baby pig anaemia of piglets. |
Lodine | Lodized salt, fish meal | Constituent of hormone called thyroxine | Goiter |
Cobalt | Salt licks | Constituents of vitamins B12. Activate some enzymes | General malnutrition |
Copper | Salt licks | Aids formation of heamoglobin& iron absorption | Anaemia |
Fluorine | Salt licks, fluorinated water | Prevents tooth decay. | Tooth decay. |
Vitamins are organic substances also required by animals for proper growth and development of the body. Vitamins are grouped into two major classes:
VITAMINS | SOURCES | FUNCTIONS | DEFICIENCY/SYMPTOMS |
Vitamin A (retinol) | Fish meal, grasses yellow maize | Proper eye sight (or vision) Epithelical cell formation aid reproduction | Neghtblindess |
Vitamin C (Ascorbic) | Grasses, vegetables and fruits | Formation of connective tissues, bone and dentine | Scurvy |
Vitamin D (Calciferol) | Bone meal, fish meal and sunlight | Aids bone and teeth formation, egg shell formation | Ricket, Osteomalacia, soft shell egg |
Vitamin E (Egosterol) | Vegetables, grasses synthetic vitamin E | Aids reproduction. As an antioxidant | Reproductive failure like starility and premature abortions |
Vitamin K (phylloquinone) | Fish meal, vegatables | Aids blood clotting prothrombin formation | Haemorrhages i.e. inability of the blood to clot in time |
Vitamin B1 (thiamine) | Yeast, cereals, green plants | Co-enzyme in energy metabolism | Poor appetite, Beri-beri |
Vitamin B2 (Riboflavin) | Green herbage and milk products | Co-enzyme in protein and fat metabolism | Slow growth dermatitis |
Vitamin B12 (Cobalamine) | Fish meal, milk products | As co-enzyme in several biochemical reactions. Red blood cell formation | Pernicious anaemia |
Niacin (Nicotinic acid) | Yeast, cereals, grasses | Carbohydrate oxidation | Pellagra (reddish tongue) |
Sources of water: Drinking water, from tap, metabolic water from food, rain water, water from rivers and ponds, grasses and fresh fodder.
Function of water
endoparasites
Types of ration/diet and their uses
Diet: a diet is defined as the amount of feed regularly given to or consumed by an animal. It is formulated to meet specific metabolic or physiological function such as: growth, lactation, maintenance of pregnancy, reproduction, egg laying etc.
Ration: Ration is the total supply of feed given to a animal in a twenty-four hour period. In other words, ration is the amount of food taken by an animal per day.
Balance Ration: A balance ration is the feed containing all essential nutrients in the correct quantity and in adequate proportion for feeding animals. Components of a balance ration include carbohydrate, protein, fats and oil, minerals vitamins and water. All these must be taken at the right proportion by farm animal for normal growth, lactation, reproduction and other body activities
Factors normally considered when deciding the type of ration to feed an animal
the purpose of production, such animal will require more feed while those not on production will require little feed.
requirement will also vary
poultry, the chicks (0-6 weeks) requires more nutritious feed (20% crude protein) then growers (6 – 18 weeks) which require about 14% crude protein
feed while sick ones consume less
feed given to farm animals. Quality fed are usually given to animals on intensive system of management while animals on extensive system fend for themselves
consume more feeds than animals that are not in these conditions
Types of ration
There are two types of rations. These are:
Categories of farm animals that require production rations include:
Ration formulation
Ration formulation involves the careful combination of all the food nutrients in such a way as to meet the nutritional requirement for a particular animal. When formulating ration for farm animals, the following principles should be considered.
young animals
Careful combination of protein sources (e.g. fishmeal, groundnut cake), fat sources (e.g. palm kernel cake, oils) vitamins, mineral sources (e.g. bone meal, oyster shell) carbohydrate sources (e.g. maize, guinea corn) will provide all the food nutrients to prepare a balanced diet or ration.
To prepare a ration for layers, the following ingredients, for example, are required:
100%
Malnutrition in farm animals
Definition: Malnutrition is a condition in which an animal shows evidence of nutritional deficiency. It occurs when a ration does not supply all the essential nutrients in the right proportion and quantities. In other words. It results when an animal takes in insufficient food or it eats diet which is deficient in one or more nutrients like protein, vitamins, carbohydrate, mineral and vitamins. This eventually result in nutritional disease. Malnutrition diseases, causes, symptoms and corrections are shown below:
MALNUTRITION DISEASES | CAUSES | SYMPTOMS | CORRECTION |
Ricket&Osteomalacia | Lack of calcium phosphorus and vitamin D | Flexible and curve bones soft-shell eggs | Add fish meal, bone or oyster shell to feed |
Perosis (slipped tendon) | Lack of chlorine, folic acid, calcium, phosphorus in diet | Chicken lie down on their kneels | Add vitamin B-complex and bone meal |
Pregnancy toxemia ketosis | Lack of sufficient energy intake by farm animals | Loss of appetite | Feed carbohydrate to animals |
Milk fever | Low blood sugar | Loss of appetite, constipation and nervousness | Feed oyster shell or bone meal and carbohydrate |
Grass tetany | Low iron in blood | Loss of appetite and nervousness | Inject iron dextran into the body |
Night blindness | Lack of vitamins A | Inability to see clearly in dim light | Feed yellow maize |
Scurvy | Lack of vitamin C | Lesion around the connective tissues | Feed vegetable and fruits to animals |
Beri-beri | Lack of vitamin B1 (thiamine) | Lack of appetite, fatigue and loss of weight | Feed yeast, cereals and vegetables. |
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