E. Martínez-Paredes
Polytechnic University of Valencia
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Featured researches published by E. Martínez-Paredes.
Animal | 2012
E. Martínez-Paredes; Ródenas L; B. Martínez-Vallespín; C. Cervera; E. Blas; Brecchia G; Boiti C; J.J. Pascual
A total of 190 rabbit females were used to evaluate five feeding programmes from 9 weeks of age to the first parturition: CAL, fed ad libitum with a control diet (C: 11.0 MJ digestible energy (DE) and 114 g digestible protein (DP)/kg dry matter (DM)) until first parturition; CR, fed ad libitum with C diet until 12 weeks of age and then C diet restricted (140 g/day) until first parturition; F, fed ad libitum with a low-energy, high-fibre diet (F: 8.7 MJ DE and 88 g DP/kg DM) until first parturition; FC, fed with F diet ad libitum until 16 weeks of age, and C diet ad libitum until first parturition; FCF, fed with F diet ad libitum until 16 weeks of age, then C diet ad libitum until 20 weeks and then F diet ad libitum until first parturition. The rabbits were artificially inseminated at 18 weeks of age. CAL group had a higher mortality rate compared with the other groups between 9 and 12 weeks of age (34% v. 3%; P < 0.05) and during the last 3 weeks of first pregnancy (14% v. 3%; P < 0.05). The CAL and FC females presented higher BW and perirenal fat thickness (PFT) than CR females at 11 days of pregnancy (+0.41 kg and +0.6 mm; P < 0.05), with F females showing medium values. The type of feeding procedure did not affect the fertility rate of young females at first artificial insemination. Differences in BW disappeared at parturition, when only CAL females presented a greater PFT than CR and FC females (+0.3 mm; P < 0.05). In comparison with FCF, CAL females had smaller and thinner live born litters (-2.5 kits and -139 g, respectively; P < 0.05), with CR, F and FC females showing medium values. The low number of kits born alive for CAL females was because of their lesser total number of kits born (-1.7 kits; P < 0.05) and the greater mortality of their litters at birth (+13.9%; P < 0.05) compared with FCF females. Non-esterified fatty acid was higher in the blood of females fed C diet (CAL and CR) than in others at partum day (on average +0.15 mmol/l; P < 0.05). In conclusion, the ad libitum use of diets for lactating rabbit does throughout the rearing period could lead young rabbit females to present a higher risk of early death and smaller litter size at first parturition. Feed restriction or earlier use of suitably fibrous diets led females to achieve the critical BW and fat mass at first mating to ensure reproduction.
Animal | 2014
Davi Savietto; C. Cervera; L. Ródenas; E. Martínez-Paredes; M. Baselga; F. J. García-Diego; Torben Larsen; Nicolas Charles Friggens; J.J. Pascual
This study examined the effect of long-term selection of a maternal rabbit line, solely for a reproductive criterion, on the ability of female rabbits to deal with constrained environmental conditions. Female rabbits from generations 16 and 36 (n=72 and 79, respectively) of a line founded and selected to increase litter size at weaning were compared simultaneously. Female rabbits were subjected to normal (NC), nutritional (NF) or heat (HC) challenging conditions from 1st to 3rd parturition. Animals in NC and NF were housed at normal room temperatures (18°C to 25°C) and respectively fed with control (11.6 MJ digestible energy (DE)/kg dry matter (DM), 126 g digestible protein (DP)/kg DM, and 168 g of ADF/kg DM) or low-energy fibrous diets (9.1 MJ DE/kg DM, 104 g DP/kg DM and 266 g ADF/kg DM), whereas those housed in HC were subjected to high room temperatures (25°C to 35°C) and the control diet. The litter size was lower for female rabbits housed in both NF and HC environments, but the extent and timing where this reduction took place differed between generations. In challenging conditions (NF and HC), the average reduction in the reproductive performance of female rabbits from generation 16, compared with NC, was -2.26 (P<0.05) and -0.51 kits born alive at 2nd and 3rd parturition, respectively. However, under these challenging conditions, the reproductive performance of female rabbits from generation 36 was less affected at 2nd parturition (-1.25 kits born alive), but showed a greater reduction at the 3rd parturition (-3.53 kits born alive; P<0.05) compared with NC. The results also showed differences between generations in digestible energy intake, milk yield and accretion, and use of body reserves throughout lactation in NC, HC and NF, which together indicate that there were different resource allocation strategies in the animals from the different generations. Selection to increase litter size at weaning led to increased reproductive robustness at the onset of an environmental constraint, but failure to sustain the reproductive liability when the challenge was maintained in the long term. This response could be directly related to the short-term environmental fluctuations (less severe) that frequently occur in the environment where this line has been selected.
Livestock Science | 2011
B. Martínez-Vallespín; E. Martínez-Paredes; L. Ródenas; C. Cervera; J.J. Pascual; E. Blas
World Rabbit Science | 2014
G. Alagón; O.N. Arce; E. Martínez-Paredes; L. Ródenas; C. Cervera; J.J. Pascual
Livestock Science | 2013
B. Martínez-Vallespín; E. Martínez-Paredes; L. Ródenas; Vicente Javier Moya; C. Cervera; J.J. Pascual; E. Blas
World Rabbit Science | 2016
Davi Savietto; S. Marono; I. Martínez; E. Martínez-Paredes; L. Ródenas; C. Cervera; J.J. Pascual
Animal Feed Science and Technology | 2016
G. Alagón; O.N. Arce; E. Martínez-Paredes; L. Ródenas; Vicente Javier Moya; E. Blas; C. Cervera; J.J. Pascual
World Rabbit Science | 2015
E. Martínez-Paredes; L. Ródenas; J.J. Pascual; E. Blas; Gabriele Brecchia; Cristiano Boiti; C. Cervera
Animal | 2018
E. Martínez-Paredes; L. Ródenas; J.J. Pascual; Davi Savietto
World Rabbit Science | 2017
Alberto Arnau Bonachera; C. Cervera; E. Martínez-Paredes; L. Ródenas; J.J. Pascual; E. Blas