Baker Al-Sabaawi
Research InterestsResearch in the field of animal production
| Gender | MALE |
|---|---|
| Place of Work | Mosul Medical Technical Institute |
| Department | Anesthesia Techniques |
| Position | Continuing Education Unit Officer |
| Qualification | Master's |
| Speciality | Animal production techniques |
| baker.h.taha@ntu.edu.iq | |
| Phone | 07765179517 |
| Address | Al-Zahra, Mosul, Nineveh, Iraq |
Skills
استخدام الحاسوب وبرامج Microsoft Office (Word, Excel, PowerPoint) (90%)
مهارة في تحليل البيانات أو إدخال البيانات (90%)
التعامل مع البريد الإلكتروني والملفات الإلكترونية (85%)
مهارة في استخدام الإنترنت والبحث العلمي (95%)
Publications
Use of Azolla in the Presence of Fiber-Degrading Enzyme Additives and its Effect on the Productive Performance in Broiler
Sep 28, 2025Journal NTU Journal of Agricultural and Veterinary Sciences (2025)
DOI https://doi.org/10.56286/x11y3495
Issue Vol. 5 No. 3 (2025): 28/09/2025
In this study, we used unsexed broiler chicks of the hybrid (Ross 308), raised in animal production fields/College of Agriculture and Forestry for the period from 7/2/2024 to 19/ 3 /2024. The chicks were subjected to the treatments under study from the first day of the experiment. The experiment included five treatments: T1 : Standard ration (without Azolla and enzyme ).T2: ration contained Azolla 7% and without enzyme .T3: ration contained Azolla 7% + 0.30% enzyme.T4: ration contained Azolla 7% + 0.35% enzyme.T5: ration contained Azolla 7% + 0.40% enzyme. Measurements of production characteristics were taken weekly and statistical analysis shows that there was a significant increase in live body weight, weight gain, an improvement in feed conversion ratio, a decrease in the feed consumed In enzyme addition transactions, and no significant effect of the treatments in the relative growth rate. This study aimed to prepare a feeder containing Azolla with the addition of enzymes as a technical management method that contributes to increasing the decomposition of fibers to increase the rate of utilization as a non-traditional protein source for locally available fodder
