Abstract:
his study was conducted to evaluate the growth performance, carcass characteristics, eating quality
of meat, and blood biochemical profile of two broiler strains fed on commercial and on-farm-
formulated diets. The study contained four sections. The first section is based on the evaluation of
commercial and farm-formulated broiler feed. In this section, the chemical composition of
commercial broiler feeds produced by feed processing and farm-formulated feed was evaluated. For
this purpose, a total of eight feed mills located in Bishoftu, Gelan, and Akaki-Kality towns were
purposefully selected to collect the broiler starter and finisher phase diet. Moreover, farm-formulated
diets were evaluated for chemical analysis. Section two of this study evaluated feed intake, growth
performance, and feed conversion efficiency of the two strains of broilers based on the feed
manufactured at the processing plant and formulated on the farm. The third section of the study
evaluated carcass characteristics and blood biochemical profile. Finally, sensory and instrumental
eating qualities of meat in broiler chickens were evaluated. A total of 384 mixed-sex day-old chicks
(192 per strain) were randomly assigned to four dietary treatments with four replicates, each
consisting of 12 broilers. The experiment was set up as a 2 x 4 factorial design, providing each strain
with four diets in a completely randomized design. After 42 days of the experiment, one male and one
female of each strain from each pen (eight birds per treatment) were slaughtered for carcass
characteristics, hematological, serum, eating quality of meat, and sensory analysis. The data
generated in the first part of the study was analyzed using the SPSS software package, version 24,
while data generated in the other three sections was analyzed using the General Linear Model
procedure in SAS version 9.4. The result of the study showed that there was a significant difference in
the chemical compositions of the commercial and farm-formulated diets prepared for the broiler
starter and finisher phases. In this study, farm formulation diets contained similar chemical
compositions to the commercial broiler diets in both phases. Similarly, the source of the commercial
feeds was manufactured based on products produced on the farm (37.5%) and purchased from the
market (62.5%). The majority of manufacturers of commercial broiler feed cost more than 3551
Ethiopian birr per quintal. The feed price was higher (62.5%) during the dry compared to the rainy
season. The main constraints on feed manufacturers are high prices and low quality of feed
ingredients, shortage of land, scarcity of feed to be mixed, and transportation costs. The result of the
study in the second section showed that there was a significant difference in the feed efficiency,
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growth, and feed intake of broilers across all dietary treatments. Broiler-fed commercial diet (T2)
exhibited the highest average daily body weight gain compared to other diet treatments. Total feed
intake was highest in broilers subjected to a commercial diet (T3) compared to other dietary groups.
Furthermore, broilers in T2 demonstrated the best feed conversion ratio in the entire phase. Chicken
strain had an effect on the final body weight, body weight change, average daily body weight gain,
and feed conversion ratio throughout the study period. Chicken strain by diet interaction significantly
(P < 0.05) influenced total feed intake and average daily feed intake of broilers during the starter
phase. The study further demonstrated that broilers subjected to a farm-formulated diet (T1) had a
similar final body weight and body weight change to those fed on the commercial diet (T4). There
was a significant effect of strains on the weight of eviscerate, dress, thigh, drumstick, breast, neck,
back, and eviscerate yield percentage, with Cobb 500 showing higher values than Hubbard broilers.
The farm-formulated diet (T1) significantly increased the weight of non-edible offal compared to the
commercial diets, except for the weight of crops and lungs, which were similar to those in the
commercial diet group (T4). The Hubbard strain showed a higher least square mean for packed cell
volume than the Cobb-500 strain. Sex was found to have no significant impact on the hematological
parameters. The farm-formulated diet (T1) also resulted in a higher marginal return rate than that of
the commercial diet (T3) in the Cobb-500 strain. The result showed a significant effect of the diets on
color redness, pH, and cooking loss in the breast and thigh meat. The farm-formulated diets (T1)
have better water-holding capacity than commercial diets (T2 and T3) for breast meat. The farm-
formulated diets (T1) of meat proximate composition are similar to commercial diets (T2, T3, and T4)
in the breast and thigh meat of broilers. The meat color redness is better in the Hubbard than in the
Cobb-500 in the breast and thigh meat. The dry matter meat proximate composition Cobb-500 is
better than Hubbard in the breast and thigh meat. Generally, Cobb 500 strains were better in terms
of feed intakes, growth performances, carcass yields, and meat quality than Hubbard broiler strain
chickens. Farm-formulated diets made from locally available ingredients were found to be an
important feed alternative in comparison to commercial diets concerning feed intake, growth
performance, feed efficiency, carcass yield, blood biochemical profile, eating quality of meat, and
sensory evaluation of broiler chickens. The feed produced on-farm formulation from locally available
feed ingredients can serve as an alternative feed to replace a commercial diet for broiler chickens in
the study area.