# Effects of additives in rehydrated corn silage with industrial tomato waste on intake, digestibility, ruminal parameters, and performance of feedlot-finished lambs

**Authors:** Patrick Ferreira Cardoso, João Paulo Sampaio Rigueira, Vicente Ribeiro Rocha Júnior, Jade Passos de Almeida, Sérgio da Conceição Assunção, Fredson Vieira e Silva, Tiago Alves Corrêa Carvalho da Silva, Thais Oliva Neres, Jordânia Pereira da Silva, Ronnie Antunes de Assis, Flávio Pinto Monção

PMC · DOI: 10.1016/j.vas.2026.100591 · 2026-01-30

## TL;DR

Adding additives to rehydrated corn silage with industrial tomato waste does not improve lamb performance, making it a sustainable feed option.

## Contribution

The study shows that microbial additives or molasses are unnecessary when using rehydrated corn silage with industrial tomato waste in lamb feed.

## Key findings

- No differences in lamb performance were observed across diets with or without additives.
- Industrial tomato waste can be used as a sustainable nutrient source without additional microbial additives.
- Feed intake and digestibility remained consistent regardless of additive inclusion.

## Abstract

•There was no difference in the performance of the lambs.•Rehydrated corn with ITW does not require microbial additives.•Industrial Tomato waste is a sustainable alternative nutrients source for ruminant production.

There was no difference in the performance of the lambs.

Rehydrated corn with ITW does not require microbial additives.

Industrial Tomato waste is a sustainable alternative nutrients source for ruminant production.

There are doubts as to whether or not rehydrated corn silage with industrial tomato waste (ITW) requires additives. Thus, study aimed to evaluate the effects of different additives in rehydrated corn silage with ITW on feed intake, nutrient digestibility, ruminal parameters, nitrogen balance, ingestive behavior, and performance of feedlot-finished lambs. Twenty-four intact Dorper × Santa Inês crossbred male lambs, averaging 20.88 ± 1.84 kg of initial body weight and 100 days of age, were used. Four experimental diets were tested: (1) rehydrated corn silage with ITW and without additives; (2) rehydrated corn silage with ITW and a bacterial-enzymatic inoculant; (3) rehydrated corn silage with ITW plus 2% powdered sugarcane molasses; and (4) rehydrated corn silage with ITW including both a bacterial-enzymatic inoculant and 2% powdered sugarcane molasses, on a natural matter basis. The roughage-to-concentrate ratio was 50:50, based on dry matter (DM). The experiment followed a completely randomized design with four treatments and six replicates. No differences were observed among diets in dry matter intake (p= 0.33), crude protein intake (p= 0.83), non-fibrous carbohydrate intake (p= 0.16), or total digestible nutrient intake (p= 0.92). Final body weight, average daily gain, hot carcass weight, hot carcass yield, and feed efficiency were 32.02 kg, 0.232 kg day⁻¹, 14.21 kg, 44.42%, and 0.23 kg of DM kg⁻¹, respectively. These findings indicate that adding bacterial-enzymatic inoculant or powdered sugarcane molasses to rehydrated corn silage with ITW is unnecessary in feedlot diets for finishing lambs.

## Full-text entities

- **Chemicals:** nitrogen (MESH:D009584), carbohydrate (MESH:D002241)
- **Species:** Solanum lycopersicum (tomato, species) [taxon 4081], Ovis aries (domestic sheep, species) [taxon 9940]

## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12908071/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12908071