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  • Επιστημονικές Δημοσιεύσεις Μελών ΠΘ (ΕΔΠΘ)
  • Δημοσιεύσεις σε περιοδικά, συνέδρια, κεφάλαια βιβλίων κλπ.
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Predicting the effects of body fatness on food intake and performance of sheep

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Author
Tolkamp, B. J.; Yearsley, J. M.; Gordon, I. J.; Illius, A. W.; Speakman, J. R.; Kyriazakis, I.
Date
2007
DOI
10.1017/S0007114507691922
Keyword
Body fatness
Energetic efficiency
Food intake
Modelling
Sheep
adipose tissue
animal experiment
animal food
article
body fat
body weight
caloric intake
controlled study
energy expenditure
food quality
lipid analysis
mathematical model
nonhuman
nutrient content
nutritional assessment
nutritional value
simulation
Adiposity
Animal Feed
Animal Nutrition Physiology
Animals
Eating
Female
Lipids
Models, Biological
Sheep, Domestic
Animalia
Ovis aries
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Abstract
Adipose tissue produces signals that can have a profound effect on many physiological functions, including energy expenditure and food intake. The hypothesis that variation in food intake of sheep resulting from differences in animal fatness can be predicted from effects of animal fatness on energetic efficiency was subjected to three tests. First, an existing food intake model was adapted to account for effects of animal fatness, as estimated by condition score, on food intake. Parameter values were derived from data obtained with two of five treatment groups of an experiment where ewe lambs were fed either chopped hay or pelleted concentrates. The model predicted the intake of the remaining three treatment groups satisfactorily. The energy intake model was subsequently extended with a protein module based upon a Gompertz curve to simulate changes in body weight and condition score. The model predicted these changes satisfactorily for most treatment groups during the experimental period of 50 weeks. In a last test, the final body weights and body lipid contents of animals fed either hay or concentrates for a period of 3 years were predicted. The predictions for final body weight (77 or 118 kg) and lipid content in the empty body (26 or 58%) were within the range of expectations for sheep with access to hay or concentrates, respectively. The biological implications of the hypothesis that body fatness acts upon voluntary intake via its effects on energetic efficiency are discussed. © The Authors 2007.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/11615/33675
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