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Title: | Effect of Cichorium intybus on production performance, carcass quality and blood lipid profile of hybrid duck | Authors: | Umami, Nafiatul Rahayu, Eka Rizky Vury Suhartanto, Bambang Agus, Ali Suryanto, Edi Rahman M. M. |
Keywords: | Carcass Quality;Cichorium intybus;Histomorphology;Hybrid Ducks | Issue Date: | 2023 | Publisher: | Asian-Australasian Association of Animal Production Societies | Journal: | Animal bioscience | Abstract: | Objective: One hundred hybrid male ducks (Mojosari×Alabio) were used to examine the efficacy of chicory supplementation as nutritional feed manipulation on production performance, and blood lipid profile of hybrid ducks. Methods: The ducks were tagged, weighed, and then allotted randomly to one of the four treatment diets using a completely randomized design. The experimental diets were: i) P0 (100% basal diets+0% chicory as control), ii) P1 (95% basal diets+5% chicory), iii) P2 (90% basal diets+10% chicory) and iv) P3 (85% basal diets+15% chicory). For each treatment group, there were 5 replicates of 5 birds each. All experimental diets were isonitrogenous and isocaloric using locally available ingredients. Results: Hybrid ducks with fed diets supplemented fresh chicory (5%, 10%, and 15%) showed increased feed intake and body weight gain, as well as feed conversion ratio to be smaller than those ducks fed diets without chicory supplementation (control). The ducks fed 10% chicory supplementation contained significantly (p<0.05) lower ash and higher organic matter contents of meat than those ducks fed other diets. The ducks fed 15% chicory supplementation showed the lowest crude protein and cholesterol content of meat among the treatment diets. Ducks fed chicory supplementation showed lower (p<0.05) blood cholesterol and triglyceride levels than those ducks fed without chicory supplementation, while dietary interventions had no major (p>0.05) influence on lowdensity lipoprotein and highdensity lipoprotein levels in duck blood. Conclusion: In this study, 10% chicory supplementation showed the best results characterized by an increase in growth performance, carcass quality, small intestinal histomorphology, and lower cholesterol levels of meat. |
Description: | Web of Science / Scopus |
URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/4610 | ISSN: | 2765-0189 | DOI: | 10.5713/ab.22.0041 |
Appears in Collections: | Faculty of Agro Based Industry - Journal (Scopus/WOS) |
Files in This Item:
File | Description | Size | Format | |
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January 2023-Animal Bioscience (Umami).pdf | 1.28 MB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
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