Tropical Animal Science Journal
Vol. 49 No. 3 (2026): Tropical Animal Science Journal

Performance, Body Composition, and Behavior of Lambs Consuming Different Extruded Roughage to Concentrate Ratios

M. T. S. Siqueira (Department of Animal Science, Faculty of Agricultural and Veterinary Sciences, São Paulo State University)
K. A. Oliveira (Faculty of Veterinary Medicine and Animal Science, Federal University of Uberlândia)
P. H. C. Ribeiro (Department of Animal Science, Faculty of Agricultural and Veterinary Sciences, São Paulo State University)
L. C. Araújo (Capitão Poço Campus, Federal Rural University of the Amazon)
M. R. Oliveira (Faculty of Veterinary Medicine and Animal Science, Federal University of Uberlândia)
L. E. G. Vilaça (Department of Animal Science, Federal University of Viçosa)
L. O. Faria (Faculty of Animal Science and Food Engineering, University of São Paulo)
G. L. Macedo Júnior (Faculty of Veterinary Medicine and Animal Science, Federal University of Uberlândia)



Article Info

Publish Date
16 Apr 2026

Abstract

High levels of roughage in the diet reduce energy density and limit voluntary intake due to ruminal physical constraints. In this context, extrusion processing can improve digestibility and enable greater fiber inclusion in the diet, thereby improving animal performance. The objective of this study was to evaluate the productive performance, body composition, and ingestive behavior of lambs that were fed different proportions of extruded roughage to concentrate (R:C). Twenty lambs, weighing 25.0 ± 2.8 kg and aged 120 ± 8 d, were distributed in a completely randomized design and fed one of four proportions of roughage to concentrate: 30:70; 40:60; 50:50; or 60:40. Lambs were housed in collective pens throughout the experimental period. Body weight (BW) and body condition score (BCS), body conformation (in vivo biometric measurements), average daily gain (ADG, g/d), and in vivo carcass characteristics were not influenced by the treatments (p>0.05). An increase in roughage levels linearly increased total chewing time (TCT) (p<0.05). In contrast, idle time (IT) decreased linearly (p<0.05). There was a quadratic and positive linear effect of evaluation day (p<0.05) for BW, BCS, in vivo biometric measurements, ADG during the periods between 15–30 d (p=0.03) and 75–90 d (p<0.05), and in vivo carcass characteristics (p<0.05). There was an interaction between R:C ratio and the day of assessment for loin eye area, with day 84 superior to day 0 (p<0.05). The inclusion of higher levels of roughage in fully extruded diets increases TCT and decreases IT without affecting productive performance or body composition in sheep.

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Journal Info

Abbrev

tasj

Publisher

Subject

Agriculture, Biological Sciences & Forestry Energy

Description

ropical Animal Science Journal (Trop. Anim. Sci. J.) previously Media Peternakan is a scientific journal covering broad aspects of tropical animal sciences. Started from 2018, the title is changed from Media Peternakan in order to develop and expand the distribution as well as increase the ...