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Selank

Selanc, TP-7

Quick Stats
Studies 114
Trials 11
2023 pubmed 8 citations

Effect of dietary inclusion of mealworm frass on growth, hematology, and serum biochemistry of sheep.

Ayaz. Muhammad M; Khan. Rajwali R; Khan. Sarzamin S; Suhail. Syed Muhammad SM; Khan. Khalid K; Ahmad. Ijaz I; Wahab. Abdul A; Ayari-Akkari. Amel A; Othman. Gehan G

Key Findings

  • 25% mealworm frass in sheep feed improved weight gain compared to control.
  • Higher frass levels (50%) reduced weight gain.
  • Blood parameters (RBC, MCV, MCHC, MPV) and serum phosphorous, triglycerides, and total protein varied with frass inclusion.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers or N=1 experimenters, this study offers no direct, actionable protocol for human health, longevity, or performance. The findings are specific to sheep nutrition and do not translate to peptide selank use or human dietary supplementation.

Summary

The study tested adding mealworm waste (frass) to sheep feed and found that a 25% inclusion helped the animals gain a bit more weight and showed some changes in blood markers, but a 50% inclusion reduced weight gain. This research is about livestock nutrition, not human health or peptide use.

Abstract

Frass is the main component of worm by-product which exhibit anti-microbial and anti-pathogenic properties. In the present study, we assessed the possibility of mealworm frass in sheep feeding regime and evaluated its effect on health and growth performance of sheep. A total of 09 experimental sheep (18-24&#xa0;months of age) were grouped into three categories (T1, T3, and T3); each group comprised 3 animals including 2 males and 1 female. Group T1 was considered control, group T2 contains 75% commercial feed and 25 mealworm frass, and T3 was 50:50 of commercial feed and mealworm frass. The sheep in group T2 showed average weight gain of 2.9&#xa0;kg; however, when the dietary inclusion increased up to 50% of mealworm frass or decreased up to 50% of concentrate feed, the average weight gain decreased up to 2.01&#xa0;kg (group T3). Moreover, the sheep fed with 25% mealworm frass exhibited the lowest feed refusal percentage (6.33%) in total duration of the dietary period (6&#xa0;weeks). The highest volume of RBC was found in blood collected from sheep fed within group T2 (10.22 10<sup>12</sup>/L&#x2009;&#xb1;&#x2009;0.34), followed by sheep fed in group T3 (8.96&#x2009;&#xd7;&#x2009;10<sup>12</sup>/L&#x2009;&#xb1;&#x2009;0.99) (P&#x2009;&lt;&#x2009;0.05). Significantly (P&#x2009;&lt;&#x2009;0.05) highest MCV volume in fL (femtoliter) was found in group T2 (32.83&#x2009;&#xb1;&#x2009;0.44) followed by group T3 (31.23&#x2009;&#xb1;&#x2009;0.23). The animals in group T3 showed significantly (P&#x2009;&lt;&#x2009;0.05) highest MCHC volume (40.47&#xa0;g/dL&#x2009;&#xb1;&#x2009;0.62) followed by group T2 (38.77&#x2009;&#xb1;&#x2009;0.97). Similar trend was found in MPV (fL); significantly (P&#x2009;&lt;&#x2009;0.05) highest MPV volume was found in group T3 (12.63&#x2009;&#xb1;&#x2009;0.09) followed by group T2 (12.53&#x2009;&#xb1;&#x2009;0.33). Significantly (P&#x2009;&lt;&#x2009;0.05) high serum phosphorous (P) (6.00&#x2009;&#xb1;&#x2009;0.29), TG (60.03&#x2009;&#xb1;&#x2009;3.11), and TP (7.63&#xa0;g/dL&#x2009;&#xb1;&#x2009;0.23) levels were found in group T3, followed by animals in group T2. We can conclude that inclusion of mealworm frass to replace 25% commercial concentrate feed improved the growth rate and overall health status of the sheep. The present study laid a foundation for the utilization of the mealworm frass (waste product) in ruminant feeding.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2023

Date

2023-03-07T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1007/s11250-023-03518-2

Citations

8

References

32