Article
Pickled vegetable and fruit waste mixtures as an alternative feedstuff
Fecha
2000Autor
Ruiz Lopez, M.A.
Garcia Lopez, P.M.
De La Mora, P.G.
Estrada, J.G.
Vazquez, H.C.
Institución
Resumen
Vegetable and fruit market waste mixtures were preserved in three dilute acetic acid solutions before drying, grinding and performing tests of acceptance in rats as a food supplement. The preserved waste was divided into unmodified (I) and Ca(OH)2-neutralised (II). Among I and II the pH ranged from 3.59 to 6.61. At the end of waste immersion in I, ash (A), ether extract (EE), crude protein (CP) and nitrogen-free extract (NFE) concentrations ranged between 28.5 and 34.7 g kg-1, 20.6 and 39.5 g kg-1, 80.2 and 91.2 g kg-1 and 732.2 and 760.3 g kg-1 respectively. CP and NFE contents were found to be decreased whereas ash, Ca2+ and crude fibre (CF) were increased (P < 0.05) in II. Phosphorus (P) concentration remained unchanged at 1.3 g kg-1 in both I and II. An experimental diet that included 179.41 g kg-1 of the vegetable and fruit waste mixture preserved with acetic acid at 20 gl-1 and alkalised was given to seven adult Sprague-Dawley rats for 14 days in comparison with a sorghum/soybean-based diet. No differences (NS) in food intake or body weight were recorded between groups, nor were there any physiological effects. This chemical procedure is recommended to return micronutrients from vegetable and fruit waste mixtures to the food chain. (C) 2000 Society of Chemical Industry.