Literature DB >> 9856391

Effect of dietary fiber or fat in low-crude protein, crystalline amino acid-supplemented diets for finishing pigs.

T A Knowles1, L L Southern, T D Bidner, B J Kerr, K G Friesen.   

Abstract

Three experiments were conducted to determine the effect of reducing NE, by adding dietary fiber in Exp. 1 and 2 and decreasing dietary fat in Exp. 3, of low-CP, crystalline amino acid (CAA)-supplemented diets for finishing pigs on growth performance and carcass characteristics. In Exp. 1 and 2, 64 barrows (Exp. 1) or gilts (Exp. 2) were allotted to four treatments with four replicates of four pigs each. Average initial and final BW were 74 and 117 kg in Exp. 1 and 74 and 102 kg in Exp. 2. The following diets were fed in Exp. 1: 1) corn-soybean meal (C-SBM); 2) low-CP (-3.5%), supplemented with CAA; 3) CAA + rice hulls (CAA+RH; NE equal to Diet 1); and 4) CAA+RH+OIL (NE equal to Diet 2). Experiment 2 was similar to Exp. 1, except RH were replaced with wheat middlings (WM), oil was replaced with dry fat, and the CP was decreased by 3.1% in the low-CP diets. In both experiments, serum urea-N (SUN, corrected for initial SUN by covariance analysis) was higher (P<.10) for pigs fed C-SBM than for pigs fed any other diet. In Exp. 1, barrows fed CAA+RH had lower hot carcass weight, percentage muscle, fat-free lean (FFLEAN), lean gain per day, retained energy (RE) in FFLEAN, and lean:fat ratio than barrows fed C-SBM, along with less FFLEAN than barrows fed CAA+RH+OIL. Barrows fed CAA+RH had smaller longissimus muscle areas than barrows fed any other diet, and barrows fed C-SBM had higher dressing percentage and lower percentage total fat than barrows fed any other diet. Barrows fed C-SBM had higher lean:fat ratio and lower total fat than barrows fed CAA. In Exp. 2, gilts fed CAA+WM+FAT had heavier heart weights than gilts fed C-SBM or CAA (P<.10). In Exp. 3, 702 gilts were allotted to six treatments with nine replicates of 13 gilts each. Average initial and final BW were 70 and 110 kg. Gilts were fed two levels of CP (15.5 or 11.7% plus CAA added to meet an ideal amino acid ratio) and three levels of NE (2,650, 2,617, or 2,584 kcal/kg), resulting in a 2x3 factorial arrangement of treatments. Gilts fed 15.5% CP had higher gain:feed ratio than gilts fed 11.7% CP (P<.01). Longissimus depth was greater for gilts fed 15.5% CP than for gilts fed 11.7% CP and was decreased as NE decreased only in gilts fed 11.7% CP (CP effect, P<.09; NE linear effect, P<.04; CP x NE effect, P<.01). Gilts fed the diet with 2,617 kcal NE had lighter carcasses and less total fat, fat gain per day, RE, and RE as fat regardless of protein level than gilts fed 2,650 or 2,584 kcal NE/kg (NE quadratic, P<.09). Loin color score increased as NE decreased (linear, P<.06), but longissimus fat depth was increased by the lowest level of NE (NE quadratic effect, P<.09). Overall, the reduction of NE in low-CP, CAA-supplemented diets did not affect growth performance and was not an effective means of reducing fat in finishing pigs.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9856391     DOI: 10.2527/1998.76112818x

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


  8 in total

1.  Effects of reducing dietary crude protein levels and replacement with crystalline amino acids on growth performance, carcass composition, and fresh pork quality of finishing pigs fed ractopamine hydrochloride.

Authors:  J K Apple; C V Maxwell; B E Bass; J W S Yancey; R L Payne; J Thomson
Journal:  J Anim Sci       Date:  2017-11       Impact factor: 3.159

2.  Effects of supplementing low-protein diets with sodium dichloroacetate and glucose on growth performance, carcass traits, and meat quality of growing-finishing pigs.

Authors:  Yetong Xu; Huiyuan Chen; Ke Wan; Kaifeng Zhou; Yongsheng Wang; Jigang Li; Zhiru Tang; Weizhong Sun; Liuting Wu; Rui An; Zhongxiang Ren; Qi Ding; Kaiyang Liang; Zhihong Sun
Journal:  J Anim Sci       Date:  2022-01-01       Impact factor: 3.159

3.  Effect of Castration Type and Diet on Growth Performance, Serum Sex Hormones and Metabolites, and Carcass Quality of Heavy Male Pigs.

Authors:  Leticia Pérez-Ciria; Francisco Javier Miana-Mena; Javier Álvarez-Rodríguez; Maria Angeles Latorre
Journal:  Animals (Basel)       Date:  2022-04-13       Impact factor: 3.231

4.  Evaluation of the effect of low dietary fermentable carbohydrate content on growth performance, nutrient digestibility, blood characteristics, and meat quality in finishing pigs.

Authors:  S M Hong; J H Hwang; I H Kim
Journal:  Asian-Australas J Anim Sci       Date:  2012-09       Impact factor: 2.509

5.  Influences of dietary protein sources and crude protein levels on intracellular free amino acid profile in the longissimus dorsi muscle of finishing gilts.

Authors:  Chunfu Qin; Ping Huang; Kai Qiu; Wenjuan Sun; Ling Xu; Xin Zhang; Jingdong Yin
Journal:  J Anim Sci Biotechnol       Date:  2015-12-18

6.  Effect of different dietary protein levels and amino acids supplementation patterns on growth performance, carcass characteristics and nitrogen excretion in growing-finishing pigs.

Authors:  Yumei Zhao; Gang Tian; Daiwen Chen; Ping Zheng; Jie Yu; Jun He; Xiangbing Mao; Zhiqing Huang; Yuheng Luo; Junqiu Luo; Bing Yu
Journal:  J Anim Sci Biotechnol       Date:  2019-09-16

7.  Effect of Immunocastration and Diet on Growth Performance, Serum Metabolites and Sex Hormones, Reproductive Organ Development and Carcass Quality of Heavy Gilts.

Authors:  Leticia Pérez-Ciria; Francisco Javier Miana-Mena; María Victoria Falceto; Olga Mitjana; Maria Angeles Latorre
Journal:  Animals (Basel)       Date:  2021-06-25       Impact factor: 2.752

8.  Hepatic lipid metabolism is affected by a daily 3-meal pattern with varying dietary crude protein with a pig model.

Authors:  Chunyan Xie; Xinyi Duan; Cimin Long; Xin Wu
Journal:  Anim Nutr       Date:  2019-11-07
  8 in total

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