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The nutritional value of tropical legume forages fed to ruminants as affected by their growth habit and fed form: a systematic review

Castro-Montoya, J. M. and Dickhoefer, U.

Animal Feed Science and Technology (2020) 269: 269

DOI: 10.1016/j.anifeedsci.2020.114641

Abstract

This systematic review summarized literature data on the nutritional composition of tropical legume forages fed to cattle, sheep and, goats, explaining the nutritional variation between legumes depending on their growth habit (i.e. herbs, shrubs, trees) and the form in which they are fed to the ruminant (i.e. fresh, hay, silage, haulm). One-hundred and eleven legume species were recorded from 399 in vivo studies, reflecting the diversity inherent to the tropics. However, those figures also reflect that, different to temperate legumes, research in tropical forages spreads across a large number of legume species, opposite to focusing on a limited number of promising species. Tree legumes had higher crude protein and lower fiber concentration than herbs and shrubs, likely because leaves and young stems are fed from trees. Herbs had a lower concentration of lignin than both shrub and tree legumes. Lignin concentration was higher in legumes, compared with tropical grasses, particularly for trees and shrubs. Lignin appears to limit in vitro dry matter digestibility and metabolisable energy of legumes, hampering their potential as feed. High nutrients losses appeared when legumes were fed as hay or exclusively legume silage. Fiber-bound nitrogen was greater in shrubs and trees than in grasses, and was increased by the process of hay-making. From the perspective of the nutritional value herb legumes appear to be the most promising as forage materials. Limited information was found for minerals other than Ca and P, and for protein- and carbohydrate-fractions, starch, indigestible-NDF, pectin, or amino acids, indicating future research avenues for a complete evaluation of tropical legumes as feed resources.

Citation

Castro-Montoya, J. M., & Dickhoefer, U. (2020). The nutritional value of tropical legume forages fed to ruminants as affected by their growth habit and fed form: a systematic review. Animal Feed Science and Technology, 269, 269. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.anifeedsci.2020.114641 cattle, ruminants, Animal Nutrition (General) [LL500], forage, growth, fiber, fibre, minerals, nutrients, starch, crude protein, Fabaceae, Field Crops [FF005], plants, chemical composition, dry matter, in vitro, sheep, amino acids, digestibility, grasses, leaves, fodder, lignin, silage, tropics, goats, Feed Composition and Quality [RR300], Forage and Fodder Crops [FF007], Plant Composition [FF040], tropical countries, tropical zones, nutritional value, nutritive value, quality for nutrition, feed evaluation, feed legumes, fodder legumes, fodder plants, forage legumes, hay, haymaking, legumes, Plant Physiology and Biochemistry [FF060], Poaceae, shrubs, trees, woody plants

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