Animals (Jan 2023)

Inclusion of Soybean Hulls (<i>Glycine max</i>) and Pupunha Peach Palm (<i>Bactris gasipaes</i>) Nanofibers in the Diet of Growing Rabbits: Effects on Zootechnical Performance and Intestinal Health

  • Geovane Rosa de Oliveira,
  • Carla de Andrade,
  • Isabela Cristina Colaço Bez,
  • Antonio Diego Brandão Melo,
  • Vivian Vezzoni Almeida,
  • Washington Luiz Esteves Magalhães,
  • Saulo Henrique Weber,
  • Cristina Santos Sotomaior,
  • Fernando Bittencourt Luciano,
  • Leandro Batista Costa

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ani13020192
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 2
p. 192

Abstract

Read online

This study evaluated the inclusion of nanofibers from soybean hulls and pupunha peach palm heart sheaths in the diet of growing rabbits. Twenty-four New Zealand White rabbits (male and female) were allocated in three experimental groups: control, fed a basal diet; Nanosoy, fed a diet containing 7% soybean-hull nanofibers; and Nanopupunha, fed a diet containing 7% pupunha palm heart-sheath nanofibers. The Nanosoy-group rabbits showed poorer final weight, daily feed intake, and daily weight gain than those in other groups. In the duodenum, villus height, total mucosal thickness, and villus width were higher in rabbits that received nanofiber-supplemented diets than in the controls. Higher villus density and wall thickness were observed in Nanopupunha-fed rabbits than in the controls. In the jejunum, although the crypt depth was higher in Nanosoy-fed rabbits, the villus height:crypt depth ratio was higher in the Nanopupunha-fed group. Nanosoy-fed animals exhibited increased count Enterobacteriaceae populations. Rabbits in both nanofiber-fed groups exhibited higher lactic-acid bacterial counts than those in the control-diet group. Therefore, although the inclusion of 7% Nanopupunha in the diet of rabbits did not alter the performance, it improved intestinal health and increased the lactic-acid bacterial count in the cecum of growing rabbits.

Keywords