Toxicity of Leucaena leucocephala in ruminants: the effect of supplemental thyroxine on goats fed on a sole diet of Leucaena
RG Megarrity and RJ Jones
Australian Journal of Agricultural Research
34(6) 791 - 798
Published: 1983
Abstract
Daily injections of thyroxine were ineffective in overcoming the toxic effects of feeding Leucaena to goats. The treated goats did not differ from the controls in liveweight change or body condition over the 15 weeks of feeding Leucaena and both groups of animals developed oesophageal lesions. Treated animals maintained normal serum thyroxine (T4) and triiodothyronine (T3) levels and did not exhibit the thyroid hyperplasia of the controls. An increase in the serum T4 and T3 levels of three of the control animals after 5 weeks of feeding was associated with declining mimosine concentration in the feed and the ability of the hyperplastic thyroids to produce sufficient T4. Serum analyses suggested zinc deficiency in the control animals, associated with their low thyroid status. It was concluded that the goitrogenicity of 3-hydroxy-4(1H)-pyridone (DHP) is only partly responsible for the toxicity of Leucaena to ruminants, and that the low feed intakes and low liveweight gains are related to other effects of DHP. The evidence for extra-ruminal metabolism of DHP is discussed.https://doi.org/10.1071/AR9830791
© CSIRO 1983