首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
1. The effect of including Leucaena (Leucaena leucocephala) leaf meal (LLM) in broiler diets was investigated employing LLM at 0, 50, 100, 150 and 200 g/kg diet. Experiments were also conducted to investigate whether reduced food intake of diets containing LLM is responsible for the growth depression.

2. LLM appears to be a good source of protein and calcium.

3. Food intake was not significantly affected (P>0.05) with dietary LLM inclusion up to 200 g/kg.

4. Inclusion of LLM up to 150 g/kg diet did not influence significantly (P>0.05) the performance of broilers in terms of body weight gain and food efficiency. However, inclusion of LLM at 200 g/kg diet had an adverse effect on weight gain and food efficiency, when compared to other dietary treatments. The profitability over food costs was low with the 200 g LLM/kg diet compared to those of other diets.

5. It may be inferred from these experiments that LLM can safely be included in broiler diets up to 150 g/kg.

6. Studies using force‐feeding and restricted feeding techniques indicated that reduced food intake was not responsible for the growth depression in diets containing higher amounts of LLM.  相似文献   


2.
1. Salseed meal contains 98 g crude protein, 22 g ether extractives, 450 g available carbohydrate and 117 g tannins per kg.

2. From the chemical analysis the metabolisable energy (ME) content of salseed meal would be expected to be 11.22 MJ/kg. In vivo assay with chicks yielded values considerably less than this, 7.1 MJ/kg being found at an inclusion rate of 150 g/kg diet.

3. As the inclusion rate of salseed meal was increased to 300 g/kg, dietary ME and the digestion and retention of dietary protein decreased.

4. More than 50 g salseed meal/kg in the diet of chicks resulted in poor growth rate and food conversion.  相似文献   


3.
1. A study was carried out to investigate whether the back‐flow of urine into the caeca benefits the nitrogen economy of adult cockerels fed on a diet containing 100 g protein/kg and when dietary urea is absorbed, excreted into urine and utilised.

2. No significant effects of colostomy on nitrogen utilisation were observed in chickens fed on 100 g/kg protein diet, whereas colostomy was highly effective in decreasing it in chickens on a diet containing 50 g protein/kg plus urea (P< 0.05).

3. Nitrogen utilisation in conventional birds was significantly less when a diet of moderate protein content was fed than when a low protein diet plus urea was fed, but the opposite effect was seen with colostomised birds (P <0.05).

4. Colostomy increased urea excretion (nitrogen/kg body weight/day) from 4 to 9 mg in chickens fed on the moderate protein diet, but greatly, from 45 to 182 mg, in those fed on the low protein diet plus urea (P<0.05).

5. Blood urea concentration increased by about 20 mg per 100 ml in 3 h, a value which was maintained up to 6 h but which returned to the prefeeding concentration at 24 h; both control and colostomised chickens on the low protein diet plus urea responded similarly.

6. After feeding urea, half the daily excretion of urea was observed to occur within 6 and 9 h, respectively, in control and colostomised chickens. The excretion rate of urea (the peak occurred during 3.6 h in the colostomised and during 1.3 h in the control) was at least twice as high in colostomised as in normal birds 3 h postfeeding.

7. It is concluded that the caeca play a useful role in nitrogen economy of the protein‐depleted chicken, but not in the protein‐adequate chicken and that dietary urea degradation in the caeca occurs from 3 h after feeding.  相似文献   


4.
1. n‐Paraffin‐grown yeast and a mixture of soyabean meal and fish meal were compared in the net protein utilisation (NPU) test, and as protein supplements in diets for broilers up to 4 weeks of age.

2. The difference between the NPU values, 0.66 for yeast and 0.80 for the soyabean meal and fish meal mixture, could largely be attributed to the high nucleic acid content of the yeast.

3. Chicks given the diet containing yeast (190 g/kg) did not grow as rapidly as those given the soyabean meal and fish meal reference diet, and the reduced growth could only partly be explained by a marginal deficiency of methionine.

4. Food conversion efficiency with the yeast diet was improved by maize oil while responses to α‐tocopheryl acetate and sodium selenite were inconsistent.

5. Chicks grew well when yeast replaced fish meal in the mixture of soyabean meal and fish meal, and when fish meal (194 g/kg diet) was the sole protein supplement.  相似文献   


5.
1. The classical ME value of triticale varied from 12.305 to 13.778 kJ/g or 11.819 to 13.016 kJ/g corrected for N‐retention depending upon method of calculation.

2. Substituting triticale for maize, weight for weight, but not on a iso‐nitrogenous basis, in a groundnut oil cake (GNC) starter diet improved weight gain (P < 0.05) when the substitution exceeded 75% without affecting the protein efficiency ratio (PER).

3. A similar substitution in a soybean oil meal diet, improved weight gain (P < 0.05) at 50% or more but PER declined (P < 0.05).

4. The net protein utilisation and protein retention efficiency values of the diets in which maize protein was replaced by triticale protein were significantly reduced.

5. The maize‐GNC diet was equally limiting in methionine and lysine while the triticale‐GNC diet was not.

6. The growth and food efficiency obtained with a triticale‐GNC diet was higher (P < 0.01) than with the maize‐GNC diet but not with a maize‐GNC supplemented with fish meal and methionine.

7. It is concluded that triticale could quantitatively substitute maize in the starter diets.  相似文献   


6.
1. The effects of dietary or parenteral administration of ascorbic acid on the adverse effects of excess dietary tyrosine were investigated with young male White Leghorn chicks in a 2‐week experiment.

2. Addition of 10 g ascorbic acid/kg to the control diet (without excess tyrosine) produced no beneficial effects on performance. Excess dietary tyrosine caused depressions in all measures of performance.

3. Adding 0.1, 1, 10 or 20 g ascorbic acid/kg to the diet containing excess tyrosine tended to improve performance.

4. Subcutaneous injection of 50 mg ascorbic acid/bird d to chicks receiving excess tyrosine brought about a significant improvement in body‐weight gain.

5. The elevation of plasma free tyrosine caused by excess dietary tyrosine decreased as dietary ascorbic acid increased.

6. Ascorbic acid can alleviate, though not completely counteract, the adverse effect of excess dietary tyrosine.  相似文献   


7.
1. A total of 360 Japanese quail of 4 commercial meat‐type lines and two diet treatments (260 and 216 g/kg or 238 and 195 g/kg of crude protein (CP) in the starter and grower diet, respectively) were used.

2. The positive effect of a high CP diet on body weight was significant only for the first 4 weeks after hatching.

3. The mean age at inflection point of the growth curve (t +) across lines and sexes was 1.4 d (0.6 to 2.8 d within line/sex groups) earlier for quail fed on a high CP diet than in quail receiving a low CP diet. The inflection (y +) and asymptotic (A) weights were similar under both dietary protein concentrations. Nevertheless, the shape of the growth curve, characterised by the ratio y+1A and parameter of the maturing rate k, was significantly influenced by diet.

4. A higher food intake and less efficient food conversion were found for quail fed on a high CP diet in the period from 15 to 28 d of age.

5. The fattening traits such as body weight, cumulative food intake and food conversion, were not affected by dietary CP content at the age of 5 weeks.

6. The effects of line on body weight, food intake and food conversion are discussed.  相似文献   


8.
1. Experiments were conducted to compare the utilisation of ambadi meal with that of peanut meal in WL chicks and broilers.

2. Ambadi meal, either expeller‐processed (135.5 g and 271 g/kg) or solvent‐extracted (130.5 g and 261 g/kg), was incorporated at the expense of the peanut meal protein used in the reference diet (180 g/ kg) into diets which were fed to WL pullets (experiment 1) from 1 to 56 d of age. The weight gains and food efficiencies of the chicks fed on the ambadi meal and reference diets were similar.

3. With broilers (experiment 2) the weight gains were also similar, at all dietary concentrations of ambadi meal (89 to 356 g/kg), to those on the reference diet (235 g/kg peanut meal) from 14 to 35 d of age. However, food intake was higher on the ambadi meal diets and this resulted in significantly poorer food efficiency when compared to the reference diet.

4. High food intake and consequently low food efficiency was still evident in birds given ambadi meal diets even when ambadi meal replaced peanut meal on a digestible protein basis (experiment 4) or when ambadi meal (expeller or solvent‐extracted) was subjected to physical treatments such as soaking, autoclaving and pelleting (experiment 5).

5. The transit time of food through the gastro‐intestinal tract of broilers was faster when the diet contained ambadi meal than peanut meal. The higher food intake seen in broilers given diets containing ambadi meal could be the consequence of the fast rate of food passage.

6. Ambadi meal in diets for broilers resulted in significant increase (P<0.05) in the lengths of jejunum plus ileum and caecum. Fibre from the ambadi meal might have influenced the changes in the dimensions of gastro‐intestinal tract as well as in the transit time of food.  相似文献   


9.
1. Sixty individually‐caged birds, each of two stocks, were offered either a complete diet (11.2 MJ ME, 173 g crude protein and 32 g Ca per kilogram) or a choice between the same diet and ground barley. All diets were offered ad libitum from 41 to 56 weeks of age.

2. Weight gain, rate of lay, mean egg weight, egg output, shell thickness and total food intake were unaffected by the treatments in either stock.

3. The mean intake of the complete diet was 825 and 845 g/kg of total intake with standard deviations between individuals of 73 and 61 g/kg respectively in the two stocks.

4. In birds given a choice of diet the one selected was related to output (P < 0.01).  相似文献   


10.
1. The gut microflora of chicks fed on a purified diet containing 300 g lactose plus 300 g starch/kg was compared with that of control birds receiving a diet containing 600 g starch/kg.

2. In 14‐d‐old conventional chicks, lactose in the diet decreased the incidence of lactobacilli and clostridia in the caecal contents, although when present in lactose‐fed chicks the counts of lactobacilli exceeded those of control chicks.

3. High counts of Proteus sp. were present in the caeca of control birds but they were completely suppressed in conventional birds fed on the lactose diet. In vitro tests showed that this inhibition was partially due to Escher‐ichia coli and Streptococcus faecalis.

4. The growth of Lactobacillus acidophilus was inhibited by lactose when gnotobiotic chicks were monoassociated but not when polyassociated. The protective effect was shown in vitro to be due to L. salivarius.

5. The pH was markedly lowered in the caecum of conventional and polyassociated chicks receiving dietary lactose. Of the strains used in gnotobiotic experiments E. coli, S. faecalis and L. salivarius produced the lowest pH values in the caeca.  相似文献   


11.
A total of 1000 birds, one‐half of which were light and the other half medium hybrids, were given diets containing either high or low levels of metabolisable energy ad libitum during the chick (0.6 weeks), rearing (6–16 weeks), early laying (first 8 months) and late laying (last 4 months) stages.

The medium hybrids ate more and were heavier than the lighter hybrids at all stages. More eggs were laid by the light than by the medium hybrids but the latter laid larger eggs so that the total weight of eggs laid did not differ significantly between the two groups.

Medium hybrids given a low‐energy chick diet laid more eggs subsequently than those given a high‐energy chick diet, while the opposite result was obtained for the light hybrids.

Birds given a low‐energy rearing diet were lighter at 16 weeks and subsequently laid more eggs than birds reared on a high‐energy diet.

During the first part of the laying period consumption of the low‐energy diet was greater than that of the high‐energy diet, but the level and efficiency of egg production were the same for both dietary treatments. Mortality during lay was not significantly affected by dietary treatment or breed.  相似文献   


12.
1. Bacteriophages (BP) have gained increasing attention as a treatment of bacterial infection for animals. However, the data pertaining to dietary application of BP for laying hens have been limited.

2. This study aimed to investigate the effect of dietary BP on laying performance, egg quality and caecal bacterial populations in laying hens.

3. The dietary BP used in this experiment was a mixture of individual BP targeting Salmonella gallinarum, Salmonella pullorum, Salmonella typhimurium, Salmonella enteritidis, Salmonella derby and Staphylococcus aureus.

4. A total of 360 Hy-Line Brown laying hens of 32 weeks of age were allotted to one of three dietary treatments with 6 replicates in a completely randomised design. The basal diet was prepared, and 0.4 or 0.8 g/kg BP mixture was supplemented to the basal diet. Diets were fed to hens for 8 weeks.

5. Laying performance and egg quality were not affected by dietary treatments. As inclusion levels of BP mixture in diets were increased, the DNA copy numbers for Salmonella spp. in the caecal contents decreased linearly, whereas the DNA copy numbers for Escherichia coli in the caecal contents increased linearly.

6. Results indicate that dietary supplementation of BP mixture decreases the target Salmonella spp. populations but increases Escherichia coli populations in the gastrointestinal tract of laying hens with little impact on laying performance and egg quality.  相似文献   


13.
1. Four diets containing different amounts of vegetable oil and linoleic acid were fed to White Leghorn hens throughout a full laying year.

2. Egg weight was poor with the low fat basal diet but increased in relation to the amounts of maize oil (4 and 30 g/kg) included in the diet.

3. With a diet containing 30 g olive oil/kg, egg weight was similar to that obtained with the diet containing the same amount of maize oil.

4. Rearing the birds on diets containing low or moderate amounts of linoleic acid did not affect the response to fatty acid content of the layer's diet.

5. It is concluded that the requirement of the laying hen for linoleic add is not higher than 9 g/kg but that egg weight does respond to higher dietary amounts of readily absorbable fatty acids.  相似文献   


14.
1. The feeding value of new low β‐N‐oxalyl‐amino‐L‐alanine (BOAA) lines of Lathyrus sativus (lathyrus) and the benefits of dehulling the seed or of pre‐adapting chicks to lathyrus‐based diets were examined in several experiments.

2. Chicks fed on diets containing 400 g/kg of the low (1.3 g BOAA/kg seed) and medium (2.2 g BOAA/kg seed) BOAA lines did not differ (P>0.05) in weight gain (WG) or in apparent fat and protein digestibilities compared to birds fed on a wheat‐based diet.

3. Consumption of 600 g low BOAA lathyrus/kg diet caused a slight, but significant (P< 0.05), decrease in WG. Food efficiency decreased as the amount of dietary lathyrus was increased, suggesting that lathyrus may contain an antinutritive factor(s) other than BOAA.

4. Removal of the hull (70 g hull/kg seed) from the seed did not affect chick performance (P> 0.05).

5. Pre‐adapting chicks for 7 d to diets containing up to 600 g medium line lathyrus/kg diet did not reduce the detrimental effects of the lathyrus.

6. Although dehulling and pre‐adaptation of chicks to lathyrus were not beneficial, the low and medium lines of lathyrus tested show potential for use in chick diets up to at least 400 g lathyrus/kg diet.  相似文献   


15.
1. Two experiments were performed to compare the relative effectiveness of feeding 1,25‐dihydroxycholecalciferol (1,25‐DHCG) in minimising leg abnormalities in broilers with other methods and to investigate interactions between dietary 1,25‐DHCC and calcium.

2. Adding 5 μg 1,25‐DHCC/kg to a diet containing 12 g calcium/kg was more effective than early food restriction or meal feeding in preventing leg abnormalities but was found to cause a growth depression.

3. The second experiment, which had a factorial design, with diets containing 7.5, 100 and 12.5 g calcium and 0, 2.0, 3.5 and 5.0 μg 1,25‐DHCC/kg, showed linear and quadratic interactions between these dietary factors. Diets with higher concentrations of both 1,25‐DHCC and calcium resulted in growth depression associated with hypercalcaemia.

4. The incidence of tibial dyschondroplasia (TD) at 3 weeks of age was highest with the basal diet containing 7.5 g calcium/kg and was markedly reduced by addition of 1,25‐DHCC and/or calcium. The incidence was very low or non‐existent when 1,25‐DHCC was fed at 3–5 μg/kg or greater.

5. Feeding 5 μg/kg 1,25‐DHCC had no effect on plasma 1,25‐DHCC concentrations, although at the higher dietary calcium contents plasma concentrations of 25‐hydroxy‐ and 24,25‐dihydroxy‐cholecalciferol were lower in those birds fed 1,25‐DHCC.

6. It is concluded that 1,25‐DHCC is most effective in preventing TD without accompanying growth depression when it is fed in conjunction with diets containing less than 10 g calcium/kg.  相似文献   


16.
1. Antibacterial activity of selected compounds in vitro and their ability to promote growth when added to the diet of chicks were not correlated.

2. The difference in growth‐promoting activity between streptomycin, which was active, and kanamycin which was not, was not related to their effects on the flora adhering to the wall of the crop, jejunum or ileum, to their relative toxicity to the chick nor to differences in their stability in the diet.

3. When low concentrations ofkanamycin or streptomycin were given, the antibiotic was concentrated in the caecal contents. In contrast, penicillin was undetectable in the caeca of birds given high concentrations of benzyl penicillin.

4. In chicks given benzyl penicillin, the numbers of Streptococcus faecium increased at the expense of Strep, faecalis. This probably resulted from changes in the crop flora.

5. Birds given high dietary concentrations of benzyl penicillin showed improved weight gains, in spite of increased numbers of Escherichia coli in the small intestine.  相似文献   


17.
1. The interaction between dietary cyanide, given in the form of sodium nitroprusside (SNP), and selenium has been studied in two experiments with growing chicks from 14 to 38 d of age.

2. In experiment 1, dietary selenium at 10 mg Se/kg reduced growth, food intake and efficiency of utilisation, and increased relative liver size and selenium content. All of these effects were eliminated by the addition of 0–1 g SNP/kg except for liver selenium content, which progressively declined towards control values as SNP was increased to 0–4 g/kg in increments of 0.1 g/kg. At 0.3 g SNP/kg, cyanide toxicity, as judged by decreased growth, reached significance.

3. In experiment 2, similar effects were observed with selenium at 10 mg Se/kg and SNP at 0.3 g/kg, but selenium deficiency was not evident from growth indicators when selenium supplementation of the diet was omitted completely, nor did these indicators suggest that deficiency was induced by cyanide.

4. In both experiments, plasma and liver glutathione peroxidase activity reflected the dietary selenium content. There was an interaction with dietary SNP content. With selenium intake at a toxic level, SNP increased enzyme activity, further evidence of alleviation of selenium toxicity, but when selenium intake was low and normal, SNP decreased activity in liver, an indication that cyanide could induce deficiency.

5. A possible mechanism for alleviation of selenium toxicity is proposed.  相似文献   


18.
1. The gross composition of Lathyrus sativus was examined, and its use as a foodstuff for growing chicks over time as well as the influence of supplementation with certain amino acid combinations were studied.

2. Chemical analyses indicated lathyrus to be high in crude protein with adequate concentrations of most inorganic elements and amino acids except methionine and cystine.

3. The performance of growing chicks fed 800 g/kg lathyrus over a four week period was significantly poorer than those given a wheat/ soyabean meal‐based diet (P<0.05), but there appeared to be some adaptation to the antinutritive factors in the lathyrus.

4. Chick performance was markedly improved by dietary methionine supplementation alone (P<0.05); it was slightly better when trypto‐phan was added in combination with methionine but was still inferior to that on a wheat/soyabean meal‐based diet.

5. Supplementation of lathyrus‐based diets with methionine and tryto‐phan may improve chick performance, but it is not sufficient to overcome the effects of antinutritive factors in the legume.  相似文献   


19.
1. The aim of this experiment was to compare the effects of dietary supplementation of hesperidin, naringin and quercetin on laying hen performance, egg quality and egg yolk lipid and protein profiles.

2. A total of 96 Lohmann White laying hens weighing an average of 1500 g at 28 weeks of age were randomly assigned to a basal diet and the basal diet supplemented (0.5 g/kg) with either hesperidin, naringin or quercetin. Each treatment was replicated in 6 cages in an 8-week experimental period. Data were analysed using one-way analysis of variance.

3. None of the dietary flavonoids affected laying performance and eggshell quality. Hesperidin and quercetin supplementations decreased albumen and yolk indexes.

4. As compared to the control group, egg yolk cholesterol content decreased and egg yolk protein content increased in response to dietary hesperidin and quercetin supplementation. The mean egg yolk cholesterol (mg/g) and protein (g/100 g) contents were 10.08/14.28, 16.12/14.08, 14.75/15.04 and 15.15/14.85 for the control group and groups supplemented with naringin, hesperidin and quercetin, respectively.

5. Egg yolk lipid and protein profiles were variable.

6. In conclusion, dietary supplementation of hesperidin or quercetin could be used in the diets during the early laying period to reduce egg yolk cholesterol and increase egg yolk protein, which may be attractive to consumers.  相似文献   


20.
A “High” protein diet (14 per cent crude protein, 2490 k cal. ME/kg.) and a “Low” protein diet (10.5 per cent protein, 2420 k cal. ME/kg.) were fed to two types of laying pullet. One type was a small commercial hybrid weighing about 1.6 kg. and the other was a large first cross weighing about 2.4 kg. at 20 weeks. After 12 weeks and 24 weeks of lay, groups were transferred from the High to the Low protein diet and vice versa.

In the heavy strain birds the High and Low protein diets both supported good egg production throughout the trial and changing from High to Low protein had no effect on rate of lay. The opposite change from Low to High, made after 12 weeks of lay, stimulated an increase in rate of lay above the level of birds which had received the High protein diet throughout.

In the small hybrid pullets the low protein diet did not support a normal rate of lay. Attempts to reduce dietary protein by switching from High to Low after 12 or 24 weeks caused a fall in rate of lay. Groups transferred from Low to High increased their rate of lay to a level comparable with controls kept on High protein throughout.

Egg weight and body weight were affected by dietary protein level in both strains. Changes in the diet caused corresponding changes in both egg weight and body weight.

It is concluded that there is little scope for reducing the level of protein in the diet during the laying year. If a diet is inadequate in the early stages of production it is likely to remain inadequate for any later stage. On the other hand, some unexpected benefit was obtained in one strain by increasing the dietary protein beyond the level which was adequate for maximum egg production in the first 3 months of lay.  相似文献   


设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号