The impact of supplementing lambs with algae on growth, meat traits and oxidative status
Version 2 2024-06-06, 11:42Version 2 2024-06-06, 11:42
Version 1 2015-03-10, 10:56Version 1 2015-03-10, 10:56
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-06, 11:42authored byDL Hopkins, EH Clayton, TA Lamb, RJ van de Ven, G Refshauge, MJ Kerr, K Bailes, P Lewandowski, EN Ponnampalam
The current study examined the effect of supplementing lambs with algae. Forty, three month old lambs were allocated to receive a control ration based on oats and lupins (n=20) or the control ration with DHA-Gold™ algae (~2% of the ration, n=20). These lambs came from dams previously fed a ration based on either silage (high in omega-3) or oats and cottonseed meal (OCSM: high in omega-6) at joining (dam nutrition, DN). Lamb performance, carcase weight and GR fat content were not affected by treatment diet (control vs algae) or DN (silage vs OSCM). Health claimable omega-3 fatty acids (EPA+DHA) were significantly greater in the LL of lambs fed algae (125±6mg/100g meat) compared to those not fed algae (43±6mg/100g meat) and this effect was mediated by DN. Supplementing with algae high in DHA provides a means of improving an aspect of the health status of lamb meat.