Archive/Effects of Replacing Soybean Meal with Cashew Nut Roasting Residue on Feed Intake, Nutrient Digestibility, Rumen Fermentation, Blood Metabolites, and Economic Efficiency in Lactating Goats
Effects of Replacing Soybean Meal with Cashew Nut Roasting Residue on Feed Intake, Nutrient Digestibility, Rumen Fermentation, Blood Metabolites, and Economic Efficiency in Lactating Goats
Thaintip Kraiprom, Hakim Jehdo, Sitthisak Jantarat et al.
May 3, 2026
en

Abstract

This study evaluated the effects of replacing soybean meal with cashew nut roasting residue (CNRR) on feed intake, nutrient digestibility, rumen fermentation, blood metabolites, and economic efficiency in lactating crossbred Saanen goats. Fifteen does were assigned to a completely randomized design with three treatments: 0% CNRR (T1), 10% replacement of soybean meal protein (T2), and 20% replacement (T3). Goats were fed pangola hay ad libitum and concentrate according to milk yield (1:2). Total dry matter, organic matter, crude protein, and fiber intake were not affected by dietary treatments (p > 0.05). However, crude protein digestibility decreased from 68.83% in the control group to 52.72% and 51.21% in the CNRR treatments (p < 0.05). Rumen pH and total volatile fatty acids remained within normal physiological ranges, suggesting stable rumen fermentation. Blood parameters, including packed cell volume, glucose, and blood urea nitrogen, were not influenced by CNRR supplementation (p > 0.05). Economic analysis showed reduced feed cost with increasing CNRR inclusion. In conclusion, CNRR can replace soybean meal protein at rates of up to 20% without affecting feed intake, ruminal pH, or measured blood metabolites; however, crude protein digestibility was reduced, indicating that dietary formulation may require adjustment.

Keywords

effectsreplacingsoybeanmealcashewroastingresiduefeedintakenutrientdigestibilityrumenfermentationbloodmetaboliteseconomicefficiencylactatinggoatsruminantsevaluatedcnrrcrossbredsaanen
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