Ciência Rural (Sep 2015)

Feeding preferences of experienced and naïve goats and sheep for the toxic plant <italic>Ipomoea carnea</italic> subsp. <italic>fistulosa</italic>

  • Carlos Alberto Oliveira Júnior,
  • Gabriela Riet-Correa,
  • Everton Lima,
  • Danilo Maia Leite,
  • James A. Pfister,
  • Daniel Cook,
  • Franklin Riet-Correa

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1590/0103-8478cr20141668
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 45, no. 9
pp. 1634 – 1640

Abstract

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Ipomoea carnea is a toxic plant that grazing goats and cattle may learn to ingest with repeated exposure. The objective of this study was to evaluate the feeding preferences of experienced and non-experienced (naïve) goats and sheep for I. carnea.The study used 3 groups of 5 goats (Group 1, experienced that were previously poisoned by the plant; group 2, naïve; Group 3, experienced eaters, composed of animals adapted to eat the fresh plant) and 2 groups of sheep (group 4, experienced that were previously poisoned by the plant; and group 5, naïve). For the test, the animals were placed daily for 10 minutes and 4 days in a rectangular stall (5x7m) with 4 feeders, each with 200g of a different food (Ipomoea carnea, commercial concentrate food, recently harvested green grass (mainly Brachiaria spp.), and Cynodon dactylonhay. The intake of concentrate food was significantly higher (PI. carnea. In a second 4 day trial, in which the commercial concentrate food was replaced by freshly harvested Amorimia septentrionalis, the ingestion of green grass (Brachiaria spp.) was significantly higher (PI. carnea when it is offered with other foods or forages, suggesting that animals will avoid the plant and not become poisoned if other food options are available.

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