Effect of castration on performance and carcass characteristics of male Sudan Desert goats

In order to investigate the effect of castration on the performance and carcass characteristics of Sudan male desert goats, twelve male kids were taken and divided immediately following birth into two equal groups i.e. one group castrated and another left intact. After weaning (2.5 months of age), the kids were separated from their mothers, put in two pens and placed on mixed growing and finishing diet. Daily feed intake and weekly live weight gain were recorded from weaning until kids were 7 months old. Ther after kids were weighed and slaughtered. Different carcass components were weighed and dressing-out percentages were calculated. Athough there were no significant differences between the two groups in either food intake, liveweight gain or food conversion ratio, castration was noticed to reduce these ratios. Empty body weight and cold carcass weight were heavier and dressing-out percentage (experessed on live weight bassis) was slightly lower for intact than for castrated male kids.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Babiker, S.A., Maglad, M., Koudoda, M.E.
Format: Journal Article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: 1985
Subjects:goats, animal performance, castration, weight,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/66973
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spelling dig-cgspace-10568-669732023-02-15T13:11:39Z Effect of castration on performance and carcass characteristics of male Sudan Desert goats Babiker, S.A. Maglad, M. Koudoda, M.E. goats animal performance castration weight In order to investigate the effect of castration on the performance and carcass characteristics of Sudan male desert goats, twelve male kids were taken and divided immediately following birth into two equal groups i.e. one group castrated and another left intact. After weaning (2.5 months of age), the kids were separated from their mothers, put in two pens and placed on mixed growing and finishing diet. Daily feed intake and weekly live weight gain were recorded from weaning until kids were 7 months old. Ther after kids were weighed and slaughtered. Different carcass components were weighed and dressing-out percentages were calculated. Athough there were no significant differences between the two groups in either food intake, liveweight gain or food conversion ratio, castration was noticed to reduce these ratios. Empty body weight and cold carcass weight were heavier and dressing-out percentage (experessed on live weight bassis) was slightly lower for intact than for castrated male kids. 1985 2015-06-05T12:18:48Z 2015-06-05T12:18:48Z Journal Article Babiker, S.A., Maglad, M. and Koudoda, M.E. 1985. Effect of castration on performance and carcass characteristics of male Sudan Desert goats. World Review of Animal Production 21(1): 11-13. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/66973 en Limited Access World Review of Animal Production
institution CGIAR
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cgspace
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Biblioteca del CGIAR
language English
topic goats
animal performance
castration
weight
goats
animal performance
castration
weight
spellingShingle goats
animal performance
castration
weight
goats
animal performance
castration
weight
Babiker, S.A.
Maglad, M.
Koudoda, M.E.
Effect of castration on performance and carcass characteristics of male Sudan Desert goats
description In order to investigate the effect of castration on the performance and carcass characteristics of Sudan male desert goats, twelve male kids were taken and divided immediately following birth into two equal groups i.e. one group castrated and another left intact. After weaning (2.5 months of age), the kids were separated from their mothers, put in two pens and placed on mixed growing and finishing diet. Daily feed intake and weekly live weight gain were recorded from weaning until kids were 7 months old. Ther after kids were weighed and slaughtered. Different carcass components were weighed and dressing-out percentages were calculated. Athough there were no significant differences between the two groups in either food intake, liveweight gain or food conversion ratio, castration was noticed to reduce these ratios. Empty body weight and cold carcass weight were heavier and dressing-out percentage (experessed on live weight bassis) was slightly lower for intact than for castrated male kids.
format Journal Article
topic_facet goats
animal performance
castration
weight
author Babiker, S.A.
Maglad, M.
Koudoda, M.E.
author_facet Babiker, S.A.
Maglad, M.
Koudoda, M.E.
author_sort Babiker, S.A.
title Effect of castration on performance and carcass characteristics of male Sudan Desert goats
title_short Effect of castration on performance and carcass characteristics of male Sudan Desert goats
title_full Effect of castration on performance and carcass characteristics of male Sudan Desert goats
title_fullStr Effect of castration on performance and carcass characteristics of male Sudan Desert goats
title_full_unstemmed Effect of castration on performance and carcass characteristics of male Sudan Desert goats
title_sort effect of castration on performance and carcass characteristics of male sudan desert goats
publishDate 1985
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/66973
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AT magladm effectofcastrationonperformanceandcarcasscharacteristicsofmalesudandesertgoats
AT koudodame effectofcastrationonperformanceandcarcasscharacteristicsofmalesudandesertgoats
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