Literature DB >> 11048931

Variability among sources and laboratories in analyses of wheat middlings. NCR-42 Committee on Swine Nutrition.

G L Cromwell1, T R Cline, J D Crenshaw, T D Crenshaw, R A Easter, R C Ewan, C R Hamilton, G M Hill, A J Lewis, D C Mahan, J L Nelssen, J E Pettigrew, T L Veum, J T Yen.   

Abstract

A cooperative research study was conducted by members of a regional committee (North Central Regional Committee on Swine Nutrition [NCR-42]) to assess the variability in nutrient composition (DM, CP, Ca, P, Se, NDF, and amino acids) of 14 sources of wheat middlings from 13 states (mostly in the Midwest). A second objective was to assess the analytical variability in nutrient assays among 20 laboratories (labs; 14 experiment station labs and six commercial labs). Wheat middlings were obtained from each participating station's feed mill. The bulk density of the middlings ranged from 289 to 365 g/L. The number of labs that analyzed samples were as follows: DM and CP, 20; Ca, 16; P, 15; Se, 7; NDF, 10; and amino acids, 9. Each lab used its own analytical procedures. The middlings averaged 89.6% DM, 16.2% CP, .12% Ca, .97% P, 36.9% NDF, .53 mg/kg Se, .66% lysine, .19% tryptophan, .54% threonine, .25% methionine, .34% cystine, .50% isoleucine, and .73% valine. As expected, there was considerable variation in nutrient composition among the 14 sources (P < .01), especially for Ca (.08 to .30%) and Se (.05 to 1.07 mg/kg). "Heavy" middlings (high bulk density, >335 g/L), having a greater proportion of flour attached to the bran, were lower in CP, lysine, P, and NDF than "light" middlings (<310 g/L), having cleaner bran, resulting in negative correlations between bulk density and CP (r = -.61), lysine (r = -.59), P (r = -.54), and NDF (r = -.81). Each 1-percentage-point increase in CP in the wheat middlings was associated with .0235 (r2 = .61) and 2.1 (r2 = .39)-percentage-point increases in lysine and NDF, respectively. Lysine content was associated with NDF, CP, and bulk density of wheat middlings (r2 = .88). There was considerable variation among laboratories (P < .01) in analysis of all nutrients. The CV among sources (100 x sigmaS/mean) was greater than among labs (100 x sigmaL/mean) for CP, Ca, P, Se, and NDF, but the CV among labs was greater than that among sources for DM and all of the amino acids except lysine and phenylalanine.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 11048931     DOI: 10.2527/2000.78102652x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Anim Sci        ISSN: 0021-8812            Impact factor:   3.159


  12 in total

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2.  Nutritional composition, gross energy concentration, and in vitro digestibility of dry matter in 46 sources of bakery meals.

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Authors:  C D Espinosa; H H Stein
Journal:  J Anim Sci       Date:  2018-05-04       Impact factor: 3.159

4.  Analysis for low-molecular-weight carbohydrates is needed to account for all energy-contributing nutrients in some feed ingredients, but physical characteristics do not predict in vitro digestibility of dry matter.

Authors:  D M D L Navarro; E M A M Bruininx; L de Jong; H H Stein
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5.  Nutrient composition and digestibility of energy and nutrients in wheat middlings and red dog fed to growing pigs.

Authors:  G A Casas; D A Rodriguez; H H Stein
Journal:  J Anim Sci       Date:  2018-02-15       Impact factor: 3.159

6.  Technical Note: Assessment of sampling technique from feeders for copper, zinc, calcium, and phosphorous analysis.

Authors:  Aaron M Jones; Jason C Woodworth; Christopher I Vahl; Mike D Tokach; Robert D Goodband; Joel M DeRouchey; Steve S Dritz
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7.  Digestibility of amino acids, but not fiber, fat, or energy, is greater in cold-fermented, low-oil distillers dried grains with solubles (DDGS) compared with conventional DDGS fed to growing pigs.

Authors:  Diego A Rodriguez; Su A Lee; Hans H Stein
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8.  Apparent and standardized ileal digestibility of AA and starch in hybrid rye, barley, wheat, and corn fed to growing pigs.

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Review 9.  Measures Matter-Determining the True Nutri-Physiological Value of Feed Ingredients for Swine.

Authors:  Gerald C Shurson; Yuan-Tai Hung; Jae Cheol Jang; Pedro E Urriola
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10.  Prediction of digestible and metabolizable energy content and standardized ileal amino Acid digestibility in wheat shorts and red dog for growing pigs.

Authors:  Q Huang; X S Piao; P Ren; D F Li
Journal:  Asian-Australas J Anim Sci       Date:  2012-12       Impact factor: 2.509

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