A Systematic Review: Assessment of the Metabolomic Profile and Anti-Nutritional Factors of Cannabis sativa as a Feed Additive for Ruminants
2024

Cannabis sativa as a Feed Additive for Ruminants

publication 10 minutes Evidence: moderate

Author Information

Author(s): Ntsoane Tumisho, Nemukondeni Ndivho, Nemadodzi Lufuno Ethel

Primary Institution: University of South Africa

Hypothesis

Can Cannabis sativa serve as a high-protein feed supplement for ruminants like Dorper sheep?

Conclusion

Fermentation can reduce anti-nutritional factors in Cannabis, making it a viable feed supplement for ruminants.

Supporting Evidence

  • Cannabis contains anti-nutritional factors that may affect feed intake.
  • Fermentation can improve the digestibility of Cannabis for ruminants.
  • Cannabis has a higher protein content compared to traditional feeds like lucerne.

Takeaway

This study looks at how Cannabis can be used to feed sheep, and it suggests that processing it can make it better for their health.

Methodology

The review followed PRISMA guidelines and examined literature from various scientific databases.

Potential Biases

Potential bias due to reliance on existing literature which may not cover all aspects of Cannabis use in animal feed.

Limitations

Limited studies on the use of Cannabis in ruminant diets in South Africa and the effects of anti-nutritional factors.

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

10.3390/metabo14120712

Want to read the original?

Access the complete publication on the publisher's website

View Original Publication