Journal of Animal and Veterinary Advances

Year: 2016
Volume: 15
Issue: 7
Page No. 41 - 48

Evaluation of Anthelmintic Attributes of Moringa and Bamboo Leaves in Gastrointestinal Nematode-Infested West African Dwarf Goats

Authors : V.O. Asaolu, S.M. Odeyinka, O.O. Akinbamijo and J.A. Akinlade

Abstract: The anthelmintic attributes of moringa and bamboo leaves were evaluated using 18 gastrointestinal nematode-infested West African Dwarf goats (nine males and nine females; mean weight = 9.5±0.5 kg) in a 12 week feeding trial with groundnut hay as the reference diet in a complete randomized design. Total and condensed tannins of moringa and bamboo leaves were quantified. Feed intake, weight changes, feed conversion ratios, faecal egg counts and packed cell volumes of the goats were monitored. The animals were thereafter slaughtered for gastrointestinal worm counts and carcass characterization. No condensed tannins were detected in bamboo leaves while they constituted 0.1% of moringa leaves. There were no (p>0.05) dietary effects on dry matter intake. Moringa-substitution of groundnut hay produced a significant (p<0.05) reduction in feed conversion ratio (18.0 vs. 27.4 g feed g–1 live-weight gain) while bamboo-substitution led to a significant (p<0.05) increase (45.7 vs. 27.4 g feed g–1 live-weight gain). The final mean faecal egg counts were between 334-384 eggs g–1 of faeces/animal, representing a drop of at least 65% but were not (p>0.05) affected by dietary treatments. The mean worm burden pattern after slaughter indicated mixed infestations with no significant (p>0.05) diet effects. Moringa substitution of groundnut hay produced significant (p<0.05) increases in warm carcass weight and dressing percentage (5.2 vs. 4.4 kg; 47.3 vs. 40.5%). Bamboo and moringa leaves contained no condensed tannins of anthelmintic significance. However, complementing groundnut hay, the feed resource of choice in The Gambia with moringa foliage (50:50 ratio), appears promising in improving resilience of West African Dwarf goats to the negative effects of gastrointestinal nematode infections and maintaining productivity under the parasitic challenge.

How to cite this article:

V.O. Asaolu, S.M. Odeyinka, O.O. Akinbamijo and J.A. Akinlade, 2016. Evaluation of Anthelmintic Attributes of Moringa and Bamboo Leaves in Gastrointestinal Nematode-Infested West African Dwarf Goats. Journal of Animal and Veterinary Advances, 15: 41-48.

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