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116289

Breed Effects on Growth Performance, Blood Parameters and the Levels of Metabolic Hormones in Rabbits Under Heat Stress in Egypt

Article

Last updated: 03 Jan 2025

Subjects

-

Tags

Animal Health, Nutrition and Food Control (Veterinary Public Health, Animal Wealth Development, Animal Nutrition, Zoonoses, Food Control)

Abstract

This study was constructed to investigate the differences between three breeds of rabbits [New Zealand White (NZW), Rex and Egyptian Gabali (Al-Gabali)] under heat stress regarding growth traits, hematological, biochemical and immunological parameters, oxidative stress biomarkers as well as metabolic hormones. Thirty rabbits of each breed (4 weeks of age) were subjected to heat stress (32 ± 1°C, 70-80% relative humidity) in the summer season at the period from mid-July to the end of August 2019. Blood samples were collected at 10th week of age. The results revealed that body weights of NZW and Rex were higher by 205 and 145 g, respectively than those of Al-Gabali as well as average daily gains of NZW and Rex were higher by 4.42 and 3.40 g/day, respectively  compared with Al-Gabali (P <0.05). Average daily feed intake of Rex was lower by 7.65 g/day than those of NZW and 2.89 g/day compared with Al-Gabali (P <0.05) and they had the lowest feed to gain ratios (3.58±0.097). Aspartate aminotransferase, urea and creatinine were significantly lowered in the plasma of Al-Gabali compared with NZW and Rex whereas, Al-Gabali recorded higher total proteins (5.90±0.048 g/dL), total globulins (2.50±0.054 g/dL), antibody titer against sheep red blood cells (6.38±0.111) and superoxide dismutase (7.42±0.163 IU/L) than NZW (5.66±0.069 g/dL, 2.21±0.084 g/dL, 4.90±0.068 and 6.80±0.053 IU/L, respectively) and Rex (5.74±0.072 g/dL 2.25±0.095 g/dL, 4.25±0.095 and 6.88±0.050 IU/L, respectively). Al-Gabali bunnies had higher immunoglobulin G, immunoglobulin A, catalase and glutathione peroxidase than NZW and Rex. However, Al-Gabali recorded the lowest insulin (15.64±0.20 ng/mL), growth hormone (45.80±0.48 ng/mL) and triiodothyronine (136.20±2.15 ng/mL). In conclusion, Al-Gabali rabbits were better adapted to heat stress compared with NZW and Rex, which was reflected in the improvement of health, immunity and oxidative stress indicators as well as lower plasma metabolic hormones, but they didn't have the genetic potential for growth traits.

DOI

10.21608/zvjz.2020.28446.1107

Keywords

Rabbits, Growth performance, hematology, Oxidative Stress, metabolism

Authors

First Name

Tamer M.

Last Name

Abdel-Hamid

MiddleName

-

Affiliation

Animal Wealth Development Department, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Zagazig University, 44511, Egypt

Email

drtamoabha18111980@gmail.com

City

-

Orcid

-

First Name

Ahmed

Last Name

Dawod

MiddleName

-

Affiliation

Department of Husbandry and Animal Wealth Development, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, University of Sadat City, Menofia, Egypt.

Email

adawod@vet.usc.edu.eg

City

-

Orcid

-

Volume

48

Article Issue

3

Related Issue

17569

Issue Date

2020-09-01

Receive Date

2020-04-29

Publish Date

2020-09-01

Page Start

284

Page End

295

Print ISSN

1110-1458

Online ISSN

2357-075X

Link

https://zvjz.journals.ekb.eg/article_116289.html

Detail API

https://zvjz.journals.ekb.eg/service?article_code=116289

Order

6

Type

Original Article

Type Code

601

Publication Type

Journal

Publication Title

Zagazig Veterinary Journal

Publication Link

https://zvjz.journals.ekb.eg/

MainTitle

Breed Effects on Growth Performance, Blood Parameters and the Levels of Metabolic Hormones in Rabbits Under Heat Stress in Egypt

Details

Type

Article

Created At

22 Jan 2023