1. Introduction
Alfalfa (
Medicago sativa) is an important forage crop in rabbit nutrition. Both alfalfa hay and dehydrated alfalfa meal are used as ingredients of complete diets. Alfalfa is a rich source of fiber and protein in rabbit diets [
1,
2,
3]. According to the literature, the alfalfa content of rabbit diets should range from 20% up to even 96%, whereas practical diets usually contain 30% to 40% alfalfa [
2,
4,
5]. Despite the numerous advantages of alfalfa, efforts have been made to find its potential substitutes, particularly in tropical regions where alfalfa is not widely grown. There is also a need for cheaper alternative feed ingredients. The list of potential alfalfa substitutes that have been tested in recent years includes amaranth meal (
Amaranthus hypochondriachus), bambara groundnut (
Vigna subterranean), perennial peanut (
Arachis glabrata), artichoke leaves (
Cynara cardunculus), bermudagrass (
Cynodon dactylon), berseem hay (
Trifolium alexandrinum), birdsfoot trefoil (
Lotus corniculatus), pigeon pea leaves (
Cajanus cajan), kudzu (
Pueraria spp.), orchard grass (
Dactylis glomerata), water hyacinth (
Eichhornia crassipes), moringa leaves (
Moringa oleifera), and many other [
6,
7,
8,
9,
10,
11,
12,
13,
14,
15].
Virginia fanpetals (
Sida hermaphrodita), a member of the Mallow (
Malvaceae) family native to North America, is yet another potential substitute for alfalfa in animal diets. Virginia fanpetals has many advantages. Due to its specific biochemical composition, Sida in the green stage can be used as a highly nutritious feed with a protein content of up to 30%. When harvested in the dry stage, the species has various applications in the bioenergy, insulation, and cellulose-paper industries. When harvested in the green stage, it can be used in the pharmaceutical, animal feed, honey, and biogas industries. Sida is also a profitable energy crop considered a future feedstock for biofuel production [
16,
17,
18,
19].
Sida hermaphrodita has already been fed to cattle and pigs [
20,
21,
22], and the promising results have promoted research into its use in other livestock species. Another plant of the family
Malvaceae, Sida acuta, has been successfully tested in rabbits [
23,
24,
25].
The objective of this study was to evaluate the efficacy of dehydrated Sida hermaphrodita meal as a substitute for dehydrated alfalfa (Medicago sativa) meal in diets for growing meat-type rabbits.
2. Materials and Methods
The animal protocol and the number of animals used in this study were consistent with regulations of the Local Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee (21/2018 Olsztyn, Poland), and the study was carried out in accordance with EU Directive 2010/63/EU on the protection of animals used for scientific purposes [
26].
2.1. Animals and Housing
The experimental animals were 90 New Zealand White rabbits (45 females and 45 males). The rabbits were randomly allocated to three groups. When the experiment began, the animals were 35 days old and had average body weight (BW) of 908.97 ± 104.11 g (mean ± SD). The animals were 90 days old when the experiment ended. The experiment was performed between September and November, in a separate facility on a rabbit farm. All rabbits were kept in wire-mesh flat-deck cages measuring 0.5 × 0.6 × 0.4 m (two animals per cage until 45 days of age, then one animal per cage until the end of the experiment). Rabbits had ad libitum access to feed served once a day via automatic feeders and water from nipple drinkers. The animals were housed under standard conditions with a temperature of 16–18 °C, relative air humidity of 60–75%, forced room ventilation, and a controlled photoperiod (12 h light with intensity of 25 lx and 12 h dark).
2.2. Diets and Experimental Procedures
Control group (DA) rabbits were fed a diet containing 20% dehydrated alfalfa meal. In the first experimental group (DA/DS), rabbits received a diet containing 10% dehydrated alfalfa and 10% dehydrated Sida meal (DS). The diet administered to the second experimental group (DS) contained 20% dehydrated Sida meal. The ingredients of diets are presented in
Table 1, whereas the chemical composition of diets and experimental factors are presented in
Table 2. The fatty acid profiles of dehydrated alfalfa meal and dehydrated Sida meal (% total fatty acid pool) are presented in
Table 3.
All diets were isonitrogenous and their nutritional value corresponded to the requirements of growing meat-type rabbits [
2]. Dehydrated alfalfa meal was purchased from a local commercial feed mill. Dehydrated Sida meal was prepared in the laboratory of the Department of Animal Nutrition and Feed Science, University of Warmia and Mazury in Olsztyn. Sida biomass was collected on a plantation in the fifth year of its productive life, located in northern Poland on sandy soil fertilized with N
80 P
20K
60 kg·ha
−1. The plants were cut before budding, at a height of 30 cm, they were chopped with an electric chaff cutter and dried at a temperature of 60 °C in BINDER dryers. After 24 h, dried biomass was ground in a mill (ZM 200, Retsch, Haan, Germany) to a 2-mm particle size. The feed was mixed in the Zuptor 300 horizontal feed mixer (Gostyń, Poland) and formulated in the MAGNUS 100 compact feed pelletizer (Ożarów Poland) with a matrix diameter of 100 mm and a pellet diameter of 6 mm.
During the experiment, the rabbits were weighed on an electronic scale within an accuracy of 1 g, and their BW were determined at the beginning of the experiment (35 days of age) and at the end of the experiment (90 days of age). Average daily weight gains, total feed intake and the feed conversion ratio (FCR) were calculated.
A digestion and balance trial was performed on 10 rabbits (5 males and 5 females) selected randomly from each group. The animals were 45 days old when the digestion and balance trial began, and 65 days old when the trial ended. They were placed individually in metabolic cages fitted with a system for quantitative collection of feces and urine. During the 10-day adaptation period that preceded the experiment proper, the rabbits were allowed to adapt to the new environment and feed. Pelleted feed in the amount of 150 g was served once a day at 10:00. The rabbits had free access to drinking water. Non-ingested feed residues and feces were collected every day and weighed within an accuracy of 1 g. The collected feces were frozen, and feces and feed samples were dried and ground. Urine was preserved with 20% sulfuric acid to calculate the total volume of the collected urine at the end of the experiment. The chemical composition and energy value of feed samples were determined.
The balance method used in studies of the type supports the calculation of nutrient and energy digestibility coefficients (DC) and nitrogen (N) retention. Nutrient digestibility was calculated from the following formula: DC = (a − b)/a × 100%, where a is the nutrient content of feed, and b is the nutrient content of feces.
At the end of the feeding trial, the animals were fasted for 24 h and sacrificed according to the standard guidelines for euthanizing experimental animals. The carcasses were skinned and eviscerated. The head was dissected along the occipital joint, the forepart was dissected between the 7th and 8th thoracic vertebrae, and the loin was dissected between the 6th and 7th lumbar vertebrae. The hind part with the perisacral area and hind legs was the remaining part of the carcass after dissection [
27]. The following slaughter performance data were collected: Pre-slaughter weight, carcass weight with and without the head, and dressing percentage with and without the head. Dressing percentages with (I) and without the head (II) were calculated according to the following formulas: DP I = carcass weight with the head/slaughter weight × 100%, DP II = carcass weight without the head/slaughter weight × 100%. The proportion of the most valuable carcass cuts, i.e., the forepart, loin, and the hind part, was expressed in “g”.
2.3. Analytical Methods
Hind leg muscles were collected from 5 males and 5 females from each group for analyses of the chemical composition and fatty acid profile of meat after 24 h of chilling at +4 °C. Feed and feces samples were also subjected to chemical analyses. The content of dry matter, crude ash, total protein, ether extract, acid detergent fiber (ADF), and acid detergent lignin (ADL) was determined by standard methods [
28]. Neutral detergent fiber (NDF), ADF and ADL were estimated in the FOSS TECATOR Fibertec 2010 System. NDF was determined according to the procedure proposed by Van Soest et al. [
29]. The levels of amino acids in diets were determined using the Biochrom 20 plus amino acid analyzer and Biochrom amino acid analysis reagents (Biochrom Ltd., Cambridge, England). Gross energy content was determined using a bomb calorimeter (IKA
® C2000 basic, Germany, Staufen). To determine fatty acid composition, all fat samples were methylated by the modified Peisker method [
30] (1.5 cm
3 of a methanol:chloroform:concentrated sulfuric acid mixture, 100:100:1 v/v, was added to ca. 150 μL fat, thermostat −80 °C, 3 h), and fatty acid methyl esters were obtained. Fatty acids were separated and determined by gas chromatography: VARIAN CP–3800 gas chromatograph-Netherlands, flame-ionization detector (FID), capillary column (length −50 m, Φ = 0.25 mm, film d = 0.25 μm), split injector, split ratio 50:1, 1 μL sample, detector temperature −250 °C, injector temperature −225 °C, column temperature −200 °C, carrier gas—helium, flow rate −1.2 cm
3/min. Fatty acids were identified by comparing the retention times of individual fatty acid methyl ester standards (Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, MO, USA) and the retention times of peaks in the analyzed samples. The relative content of each fatty acid was expressed as a percent of the total peak area of all fatty acids in the sample. The concentrations of saturated fatty acids (SFAs), monounsaturated fatty acids (MUFAs) and polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs) were calculated.
2.4. Statistical Analyses
Data were expressed as means ± standard deviation of the mean (SD). The results were analyzed statistically by one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA), and the significance of differences among groups was determined by Duncan’s multiple range test at
p equal to or less than 0.05 and 0.001. All calculations were performed using Statistica 12.0 software [
31].
3. Results
The initial and final BW of rabbits from the control group and experimental groups did not differ significantly (
Table 4). However, the final BW of rabbits fed Sida-supplemented diets were higher than those of animals fed alfalfa-based diets: Group DA/DS (2561.02 g) and group DS (2481.40 g) vs. group DA (2392.08 g). Average daily weight gains ranged from 26.97 g to 29.96 g, and no significant differences were found between groups, although daily gains tended to increase in rabbits receiving dehydrated Sida meal, similarly to BW values. Feed intake was similar in all groups, whereas total BW gain was significantly higher in group DA/DS than in group DA (1.65 vs. 1.48 kg). The FCR was lower in the experimental groups than in the control group, and it reached the lowest level in group DA/DS −4.05 kg.
Nutrient digestibility (
Table 5) was similar in all groups. No significant differences in nitrogen retention were observed between groups. However, nitrogen retention (%) tended to be higher in the experimental groups, and the highest daily nitrogen retention (g) as well as nitrogen retention (%) with respect to nitrogen uptake and digestion were noted in group DA/DS fed a diet containing 10% dehydrated alfalfa and 10% dehydrated Sida meal.
Selected carcass characteristics, presented in
Table 6, did not differ significantly between groups, except for the proportion of the hind part which was significantly higher in group DA/DS (442.43 g) than in group DA (390.78 g). In general, carcass weight, dressing percentage, and the weights of carcass cuts were lower in the control group (DA) than in the experimental groups.
The content of dry matter and total protein in hind leg muscles was significantly higher in the control group than in the experimental groups (
Table 7), whereas ether extract content was lowest in group DA. Crude ash content was highly similar in all groups, ranging from 1.21% to 1.22%.
The fatty acid profiles of hind leg muscles are shown in
Table 8. The concentrations of SFAs were higher in groups fed Sida-supplemented diets, and MUFA levels were higher in the control group (DA). An analysis of individual fatty acids revealed that the content of C
14:0 and C
16:0 was higher in group DS than in group DA (20% dehydrated alfalfa meal), the content of C
18:0 was higher in groups DA/DS and DS than in group DA, and the content of C
16:1, C
17:1 and C
18:1 was higher in group DA (control) than in the experimental groups. No significant differences in PUFA levels were found between groups.
Mortality or serious diseases symptoms that could affect the results of this study were not observed during the experiment.
4. Discussion
The performance parameters of rabbits from all groups (
Table 4) were within normal limits for growing meat-type rabbits of medium-sized breeds raised in Europe [
5,
27,
32]. However, only a few studies have investigated the efficacy of
Sida hermaphrodita in livestock nutrition, and there appears to be no published information on rabbits. Therefore, it was difficult to compare the results of this study with the findings of other authors. In general, fresh and dehydrated alfalfa is regarded as a valuable feed ingredient for rabbits [
14,
33,
34,
35,
36]. According to some authors, increasing dietary inclusion levels of alfalfa contributes to production results in rabbits [
37,
38]. In this study, the performance parameters of experimental animals (groups DA/DS and DS) were more desirable, compared with the control group fed alfalfa-based diets, which suggests that Sida exerted a beneficial influence on rabbits. However, the observed positive effects cannot be attributed to the chemical composition of feed because the levels of nutrients and selected amino acids in dehydrated alfalfa meal and dehydrated Sida meal were similar (
Table 2). Nevertheless, it appears that
Sida hermaphrodita, similarly to other species of the genus Sida (
Malvaceae),
Sida acuta, Sida cordifolia, Sida spinosa, Sida rhombifolia, and
Sida veronicaefolia, has health-promoting properties which positively affect the health status and, indirectly, productivity of animals [
39]. However, further research is needed to validate this hypothesis. It should be noted that studies investigating another plant species of the genus
Malvaceae, Sida acuta, revealed that experimental diets had no adverse effects on performance or overall health in rabbits [
23,
24,
25].
The values of nutrient digestibility coefficients and nitrogen retention, calculated in this experiment, are typical of growing broiler rabbits [
5,
32]. Despite an absence of significant differences between group means,
Table 5 data correspond to the performance parameters presented in
Table 4 because more desirable trends were noted in the experimental groups receiving dehydrated Sida meal. The effect of
Sida hermaphrodita on nutrient digestibility in rabbits or other animal species has not been examined to date, except for a study investigating gilts, which revealed an increase in protein and fiber digestibility with increasing levels of Sida meal (up to 10%) in the ration [
20]. However, the results of the above study cannot be extrapolated to rabbits due to considerable physiological differences between the analyzed species. In a study of domestic and wild rabbits [
36], alfalfa-supplemented diets increased or did not affect nutrient digestibility. Sun et al. [
14], who analyzed rabbits fed diets containing 30% alfalfa meal, demonstrated that protein digestibility reached 61%, which is consistent with the values determined in our study. The cited authors also observed an increase in dry matter digestibility associated with the dietary inclusion levels of alfalfa.
The lower average weights of carcass and valuable cuts in group DA resulted from lower slaughter weight of rabbits (
Table 6). The values of dressing percentage without the head (51.44–53.94%) and with the head (46.06–48.43%) are similar to those reported in previous studies [
27,
32]. The values of carcass quality parameters are related to the growth performance of rabbits (
Table 4), nutrient digestibility, and nitrogen retention (
Table 5).
The proximate chemical composition of meat (
Table 7) was typical of broiler rabbits slaughtered at 90 days of age [
27,
40]. In a study by Kowalska et al. [
40], the content of total protein and crude ash in rabbit meat ranged from 21.78% to 23.41%, and from 1.15% to 1.17%, respectively. In the work of Daszkiewicz et al. [
27], the dry matter and total protein content of rabbit meat reached 23.88–24.27% and 22.18–22.78%, respectively. The values reported by the above authors are similar to those determined in the current study. The increase in the concentrations of dry matter and total protein in the hind leg muscles of rabbits, observed in this experiment, is difficult to explain because it did not correspond to the similar chemical composition and fatty acid profiles of alfalfa, Sida, and the respective diets (
Table 2) or higher nitrogen retention in group DA/DS (
Table 5). According to previous research, the fatty acid profile of diets fed to animals affects the fatty acid profile of their meat. Lin et al. [
41] demonstrated that the fatty acids of dietary fats may greatly influence the fatty acid composition of adipose tissue in rabbits.
The results of numerous studies show that feeding high levels of alfalfa meal has a positive effect on the quality of rabbit meat. It may increase the concentrations of total essential amino acids, taste-related amino acids, and alpha-linolenic acid, thus improving the nutritional and organoleptic quality of meat [
38,
42]. Capra et al. [
33] noted an increase in linolenic acid content and an improvement in the n-6/n-3 PUFA ratio in the tissues of rabbits fed alfalfa-supplemented diets. Dal Bosco et al. [
34] attempted to improve the quality of rabbit meat by increasing the levels of natural bioactive compounds through providing fresh alfalfa to rabbits. The cited authors found that the dietary supplementation with fresh alfalfa led to an increase in the concentrations of stearic, linolenic, eicosatrienoic, eicosapentaenoic, docosapentaenoic, and docosahexaenoic acids, and total PUFAs in meat, whereas MUFA content was considerably lower, in contrast to our study. Similar but less pronounced effects of alfalfa on the quality of rabbit meat were reported by Dal Bosco et al. [
35]. In the cited study by Dal Bosco et al. [
34], the proportions of fatty acid groups in the longissimus lumborum muscle of rabbits fed diets with increased alfalfa content were as follows: SFAs 41.9%, MUFAs 22.6%, and PUFAs 35.9%. Bianchi et al. [
42] found that the fatty acid composition of the hind leg muscles of rabbits receiving 25% dehydrated alfalfa was as follows: SFAs 39.81–41.15%, MUFAs 28.05–30.01%, and PUFAs 23.69–23.75%. Thus, the fatty acid profile of hind leg muscles in rabbits from group DA (
Table 8) can be considered typical of rabbits fed diets supplemented with dehydrated alfalfa. The increase in SFA levels and the decrease in MUFA content, observed in the experimental groups, were most likely due to their presence in dehydrated Sida meal (
Table 3).