World Rabbit Science (Jun 2017)

Milk intake in kits: not only the total amount matters

  • Alberto Arnau Bonachera,
  • C. Cervera,
  • E. Martínez-Paredes,
  • L. Ródenas,
  • J. J. Pascual,
  • E. Blas

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4995/wrs.2017.6707
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25, no. 2
pp. 159 – 166

Abstract

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The aim of this work was to identify milk intake variation patterns in kits throughout lactation, to evaluate their permanent maternal component and their relationships with the performance of kits before and after weaning. To achieve this goal, we used 73 rabbit does, controlled between the 1st and the 4th lactation, which kindled 229 litters with a total of 2225 kits. The daily milk intake records per young rabbit were analysed using a principal component analysis (PCA). We found that 72.3% of the variability was explained by the first 3 principal components (PCs). PC1 explained 46.4% of the total variability, was associated with the total amount of milk intake during lactation and presented a repeatability of 0.27 (P0.05). This component was little related to performance traits. Therefore, it seems that milk plays 2 different roles at the beginning of feed intake; the most important would affect development of the kits and thus is related with high intake. The second one, for a given total amount of milk intake during lactation, would create a kind of competition between milk and feed intake at the end of lactation. The effects of both components still persist during the growing period and seem to be moderately affected by the mother.

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