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1.
An experiment was described, involving 48 individually-fed pigs from 20 to 60 kg liveweight, in which the value of freshly produced lucerne juice as a source of protein was determined. The juice was the product of a green-crop fractionation process and was produced daily except Sundays. It was given without any preservatives within 22 h of production, twice daily. The juice was supplied in amounts required to replace half of the protein supplied by the 7% of white-fish meal in a control diet; it was given on the basis of its true protein content which was forecast to have an average value of 2.0%.Compared with the control pigs fed on an all-meal diet, those given juice grew at the same rate but had a significantly poorer feed:gain ratio and greater daily feed intake. They also had a thicker backfat layer and somewhat poorer commercial grading.Accepting these limitations, it was concluded that fresh lucerne juice, produced daily, could be given to the growing pig to supply half of the normal protein supplement in its diet.  相似文献   

2.
Three experiments were completed in which liquid cheese whey, either sour or sweet (preserved with 0.1% formalin), was fed in restricted amounts as a partial replacement of the barley meal component of growing pig diets from 20 to 90 kg liveweight.All diets were compounded so as to provide comparable daily intakes of total protein, major minerals and vitamins and included a high-copper supplement.The performance and carcass quality of pigs fed whey in amounts to replace, on a DM basis, 30% of barley meal were closely comparable to those of all-meal fed control pigs. There were no differences of significance between pigs fed sour or sweet whey (mean titratable acidity 2.2 and 0.27, respectively), nor between pigs receiving white-fish meal or soyabean meal as the sole protein supplement in the basal meal fed with the whey.At this level of intake, it was calculated that 1.3 l whey have the same nutritive value as a source of protein and energy as 0.1 kg of barley meal (88% DM). (1 gal. whey is equivalent to 34 lb barley meal.)When the amount of sour whey fed replaced 50% of barley meal, there was a significant adverse effect on the performance of the pigs.Feeding with whey increased the amounts of copper found in the kidney and liver at slaughter but these did not approach toxic levels; the extent of the increase appeared to be positively correlated with the quantity and acidity of the whey. Copper stores in these two organs were reduced when soyabean meal replaced white-fish meal as the protein supplement.  相似文献   

3.
In two trials, pigs were given lucerne juice (LJ) as the only protein supplement from 20–90 kg liveweight. The effects of reducing the mineral supplementation of the meal given with LJ and of increasing water intake were studied.In Trial 1, a total of 45 pigs were given either control diets with 7% white-fish meal to 54 kg liveweight and 3.5% thereafter, or diets in which the fish meal provided by the control diets was replaced with LJ. The meal mixture given with LJ was either supplemented or unsupplemented with limestone flour, dicalcium phosphate and salt. In the former case, as in previous studies, the Ca, P and Na content of LJ was not taken into account in formulating the meal mixture; in the latter treatment, taking these into account eliminated the need for supplements.In Trial 2, 18 pigs received LJ at a similar level to that given in Trial 1, together with a meal mixture without the mineral supplements. The water intake of half the pigs was restricted to 2.5 l/kg meal, including the water in LJ. The remaining pigs had, in addition, a supply of water ad libitum.The pigs given LJ in Trial 1 had much lower growth rates and feed: gain ratios than the controls given white-fish meal. A significant, but relatively small, improvement in performance was achieved by giving LJ with the unsupplemented meal rather than with meal supplemented with minerals. In Trial 2, supplying additional water ad libitum significantly increased feed intake. There was a tendency for this to increase daily gain, although the difference was not significant.Despite the improvements due to adjustments of mineral and water intake, the performance of the pigs given LJ as the only protein supplement was unsatisfactory. This may be due to the very high level of potassium in LJ. This cannot be taken into account in formulating a practical basal meal mixture.  相似文献   

4.
Freshly collected effluent was treated with 2 ml formalin per litre and used to replace 150 g/kg of the dry matter of an all-meal control diet of bacon pigs. Diets containing effluent from either unwilted or wilted crops were compared with the control diet which was also given wet by adding water. Liveweight gains of 10 pigs per treatment from 65 to 86 kg on diets containing effluents from unwilted and wilted crops and on the control diet were 753, 715 and 719 ± 16.8 g/day, respectively, and in the same order feed conversion ratios (corrected to dry matter content of the control diet) were 2.94, 3.10 and 3.07 ± 0.075. None of these differences were significant. There were no significant differences in killing-out yield, in hardness of subcutaneous back-fat when measured by a penetrometer or in abnormal odour rating of subcutaneous back-fat.Formalin at levels of 1 and 2 ml/l and formic acid at levels of 1, 2 and 6 ml/l were added as potential preservatives to 1000 ml quantities of freshly collected silage effluent, which was then stored at 23°C. The 2 ml/l level of formalin and 6 ml/l level of formic acid prevented mould growth for 26 and 19 days, respectively.Freshly collected effluent was stored for 3.5, 14, 28, 56, 112 and 240 days after treatment, with formalin at the rate of 3 ml/l, and used in a pig-feeding trial. Pigs were fed either on a control all-meal diet or an equal dry matter intake of 150 g/kg effluent DM and 850 g/kg meal DM.A total of 120 animals were individually penned and fed twice daily on the experimental diets from 33 kg to slaughter at 82 kg liveweight. Overall mean liveweight gains for effluent and control diets were 646 and 656 ± 7.5 g/day, respectively, and the corresponding feed conversion ratios (DM basis) were 2.69 and 2.64 ± 0.030, neither of the differences being significant. Animal performance did not deteriorate with increasing period of effluent storage. No significant differences were found in carcase lean, back-fat thickness nor hardness of back-fat.A digestibility study was carried out on freshly collected effluent from another source. The level of dietary inclusion was equal to that in the previous experiments and the digestibility of dry matter was 0.831 and 0.819, and of nitrogen 0.822 and 0.827 for the control and effluent diets, respectively. A value of 11.4 MJ/kg dry matter was calculated by difference for the digestible energy of this effluent. In a further digestibility trial, digestible energy values of 14.6 and 14.2 MJ/kg dry matter were calculated by difference for effluents stored for 3.5 and 300 days, respectively.  相似文献   

5.
‘Pekilo protein’ — a fungal protein (Oy Tampella Ab, Tampere, Finland) — was tested as a replacement for white-fish meal as the sole protein supplement in cereal-based diets for growing pigs from 20 to 90 kg live-weight.The tests were carried out using a ‘standard’ and a ‘low’ level of protein supplementation, the latter being known to be significantly below the protein requirements of the growing pig for optimum performance.There were no significant differences in performance or carcass composition between pigs receiving diets providing the same amounts of total N × 6.25 with either white-fish meal or ‘Pekilo protein’ as the protein supplement.The performance and carcass composition of the pigs receiving the ‘standard’ level of protein were significantly better than for the pigs given the ‘low’ level, irrespective of whether the protein supplement was white-fish meal or ‘Pekilo protein’.The only significant difference arising from the extensive evaluation studies of meat quality carried out was in tenderness, meat from pigs given ‘Pekilo protein’ being marginally more tender than meat from animals given white-fish meal.  相似文献   

6.
Comminuted cabbage (Variety Drumhead) was used in diets for growing pigs and contained in dry matter (DM), 18 MJ/kg, 23% crude protein, 7.9% true protein, 0.76% total lysine, 0.47% methionine + cystine, 14.2% acid detergent fibre and 13.2% ash.Ninety pigs were raised from an initial live weight of 57 kg either on a diet containing 80.5% barley and 18% soya bean meal on a DM basis, or on diets in which cabbage DM replaced either 15 or 30% of the DM from this mixture. The use of cabbage in the diet at these inclusion levels reduced the rate of carcass-weight gain by 12.2 and 18.5%, respectively, compared with that of the control animals.The potential high yield of nutrients/ha from cabbage, factors which may be affecting the utilization of these nutrients by pigs and the variable chemical composition of this brassica crop, are discussed.  相似文献   

7.
One hundred and twenty pigs, initially 4–5 kg liveweight, were fed on wheat-based diets supplemented with meat meal and amino acids in two experiments, each of 4 weeks duration.In the first experiment, the supplementation of a normal meat meal diet with lysine and methionine increased the feed intake and weight gains of the pigs by 15 and 18%, respectively. Nitrogen retention was increased by 30%. Tryptophane gave a similar response to lysine and methionine.In the second experiment, a 21% crude protein basal diet was similar to the basal diet of the first experiment but it contained 1.02% lysine and 0.50% methionine plus cystine, compared to 0.90 and 0.51%, respectively, in the first experiment. Lysine and methionine supplementation of the diet did not significantly improve the performance of the pigs in the second experiment, but the supplementation of the diets with 0.08% tryptophane and lysine and methionine increased weight gains and feed intakes and decreased urea content of the blood plasma. The 21% crude protein diet contained 0.15% tryptophane.Increasing the crude protein content of diets from 18 to 24% by increasing their meat meal content increased the daily weight gains from 190 to 276 g.  相似文献   

8.
Macerated swedes (variety Balmoral) were used in diets for growing pigs and contained in dry matter (DM), gross energy 18.6 MJ/kg, crude protein 12.8%, true protein 5.0%, total lysine 0.40%, methionine + cystine 0.26%, total soluble sugars 40.8%, acid-detergent fibre 20.6% and ash 10.9%.One hundred pigs were grown from a mean live weight of 56 kg on either a control diet, containing 89% barley and 9% soya bean meal on a DM basis, or on diets in which swede DM replaced 20 or 40% of barley DM. The results suggest that for equivalent carcass growth approximately 1.5 units of swede DM are required for each unit of barley DM replaced.Swedes are a potentially valuable food, but further investigation is required into factors affecting their nutritive value for pigs, particularly varietal differences, the effect of within-season changes in chemical composition and the utilization of the energy, protein and fibre components of the organic matter.  相似文献   

9.
The responses of 144 Large White × Landrace pigs (72 castrated males and 72 females; mean initial liveweight approximately 23 kg) to graded additions of L-lysine monohydrochloride to a basal diet containing yellow maize and groundnut meal and 180 g crude protein per kg were studied. Total dietary lysine levels ranged from 5–12 g kg?1. All diets contained digestible energy of 15.44–16.02 MJ kg?1 DM. The pigs were individually fed from 23 to 33, 47 or 62 kg liveweight. Growth performance, carcass characteristics, nitrogen retention and plasma urea concentration were employed as response criteria. Influence of sex on lysine requirements for optimum growth, nitrogen retention and efficiency of essential amino acids utilization measured by minimum plasma urea concentration was also investigated.Supplementing the basal diet with L-lysine monohydrochloride significantly (P < 0.001) improved growth performance. Castrated male pigs grew faster and responded better to dietary lysine supplementation than gilts. No apparent decline in lysine requirements for optimum growth performance was observed for the two sexes of pigs as they got older. Optimum growth performance in castrated males was obtained with 9, 8 and 8 g lysine kg?1 diets for the liveweight ranges 23–33, 23–47 and 23–62 kg, respectively. Optimum growth performance of the gilts for all three liveweight ranges was obtained at an estimated dietary lysine concentration of 11 g kg?1.Optimum lean deposition, carcass leanness and other carcass measurements were obtained at 8 g lysine kg?1 diet. Carcass data were not analysed for influence of sex.Plasma urea concentration showed further evidence of a quicker and cheaper indirect index of dietary amino acid adequacy in pigs. Minimal plasma urea concentration was obtained at 7–8 g lysine kg?1 diet for the three liveweight ranges investigated.In a humid tropical environment, such as Ibadan, the dietary lysine requirement of Large White × Landrace pigs of 23–62 kg is about 9 g lysine kg?1 diet for optimum growth performance and carcass quality, but nitrogen metabolism and plasma urea data suggest a lower level of to 7–9 g lysine kg?1 diet.  相似文献   

10.
An experiment was conducted in which hatchery waste meal (HWM) replaced fish meal (protein for protein) in layer diets at 0%, 33%, 66% and 100% levels. Both feed and protein intake were superior on HWM diets. The highest hen-day production of 73.97% was obtained on diet 2 in which 33% of fish meal was replaced with HWM. Egg weight and egg length were also superior on HWM diets. All birds fed on HWM diets had thicker egg shells (0.33 mm) than did those fed on the control diet, fish meal diet (0.32 mm). Results obtained for yolk weight were statistically different (P < 0.05). Highest values for yolk weight (16.91 g) and albumen weight (40.93 g) were recorded for birds fed with diet 4 in which 100% fish meal was replaced with HWM. HWM can replace fish meal completely in layer diets without adverse effect on egg quality characteristics.  相似文献   

11.
The experiment investigated the effects of increasing dietary levels of bacterial protein meal (BPM) on various blood parameters reflecting protein and fat metabolism, liver function, and purine base metabolism in growing pigs. Sixteen barrows were allocated to four different experimental diets. The control diet was based on soybean meal. In the other three diets soybean meal was replaced with increasing levels of BPM, approximately 17%, 35%, and 50% of the nitrogen being derived from BPM. Blood samples from the jugular vein were taken when the body weights of the pigs were approximately 10 kg, 21 kg, 45 kg, and 77 kg. The blood parameters reflecting fat metabolism and liver function were not affected by diet. Both the plasma albumin and uric acid concentrations tended to decrease (P = 0.07 and 0.01, respectively) with increasing dietary BPM content, whereas the plasma glucose concentration tended to increase (P = 0.07) with increasing dietary BPM content. It was concluded that up to 50% of the nitrogen could be derived from BPM without affecting metabolic function, as reflected in the measured blood parameters.  相似文献   

12.
A feeding trial was carried out to examine the effect of supplementary protein on the performance of pigs, when swede dry matter replaced 40% of the dry matter supplied by barley in two diets providing different amounts of protein. One hundred and twenty pigs of about 60 kg initial live weight were given one of four diets, each of which provided a constant amount of dry matter daily for 42 days, after which the pigs were slaughtered at about 90 kg live weight. The two basal diets were, on a dry matter basis; barley 2.0 kg plus either 0.2 or 0.4 kg soya bean meal. A mineral and vitamin supplement was given with each diet. There was no significant interaction between the effects of the inclusion of swedes or additional soya bean meal in the diet. The averaged results for pairs of diets showed that the use of swedes decreased carcass-weight gain from 0.62 to 0.51 kg/day and that the increment of soya bean meal increased it from 0.54 to 0.59 kg/day (P < 0.001 for both). It is suggested that the failure of swede dry matter to give an equivalent response to that of barley is not due to the nutritional value of its crude protein component per se but to other physical and chemical factors which may affect its utilization as an energy feed-source for pigs.  相似文献   

13.
Two experiments involving 144 Yorkshire × Lacombe gilts, with an average initial weight of 20 kg, were conducted. In Experiment 1 the gilts were allotted to a control diet containing soya bean meal (SBM) or to diets in which either 50% or all of the supplementary protein was provided by Tower rapeseed meal (RSM). In the second experiment the two diets had either SBM or Tower RSM as the supplementary protein source. In a third diet Tower RSM was supplemented with sufficient lysine to equal the calculated available lysine level of the SBM control diet. In Experiment 1, gilts given the SBM diet grew from 20 to 60 kg significantly faster (P<0.01), and had better feed conversion efficiency (P<0.01), than those given the RSM diets. A 50% replacement of SBM by Tower RSM gave intermediate results. Partial or total replacement of SBM by Tower did not significantly affect the growth rate or feed conversion efficiency of the gilts when growing from 60 to 100 kg liveweight. Serum triiodothyronine (T3) and thyroxine (T4) concentrations of the gilts at 100 kg were lower in pigs fed on the RSM diets but the differences were not significant. In the second experiment, total replacement of SBM by Tower RSM, with or without the addition of lysine, significantly (P<0.001) reduced growth rate and feed conversion efficiency during the growing period (20–60 kg) but did not significantly affect performance during the finishing period (60–90 kg). Serum T3 concentration was not significantly affected by the addition of Tower RSM to the diet but T4 concentrations were significantly reduced (P<0.01). None of the carcass parameters studied were significantly affected by the addition of Tower RSM to the diets.  相似文献   

14.
The dry matter content of 18 samples of fish silage prepared from fish species or prawn offal varied from 190 to 274 g/kg (mean 239). Chemical composition (mean and range, g/kg dry matter) was: crude protein 686 (487–882); ether extract 100 (53–211); ash 163 (105–319); and total mercury 1.05 mg/kg (0.24–4.05 mg/kg).The nutritional value of fish silage, prepared from Ocean perch and Nannygai, was investigated for grower pigs. Wheat-based diets were formulated in which fish silage partially or completely replaced soya been meal as the protein supplement. The diets were evaluated over the 20 to 45 kg growth phase. Half the pigs were slaughtered at 45 kg live weight; the remainder were fed on the wheat and soya bean meal diet to 80 kg live weight in order to observe the effect of withdrawal of fish silage at 45 kg on subsequent growth performance and mercury content in the lean tissue.The addition of fish silage improved growth rate (P < 0.05) and food conversion ratio (P < 0.01) during the 20 to 45 kg growth phase. No adverse effects on carcass quality were observed. During the 45 to 80 kg growth phase, when all pigs were fed on the wheat and soya bean meal diet, all produced similar performance. Over the 20 to 80 kg growth phase, the beneficial effects of fish silage on growth rate and feed conversion were maintained.Methyl mercury content in the semi-membraneous muscle of pigs fed on fish silage and slaughtered at 45 kg live weight was 0.085 mg/kg on a wet weight basis. This decreased to 0.018 mg/kg in pigs that had the fish silage withdrawn from the diet during the 45 to 80 kg growth phase.  相似文献   

15.
The effect of increasing the dietary content of bacterial protein meal (BPM) on protein turnover rate, and on nucleic acid and creatinine metabolism in growing minks and pigs was investigated in two experiments. In each experiment, 16 animals were allocated to four experimental diets. The diets containing no BPM served as controls, i.e. for minks diet M1, for pigs P1; the experimental diets contained increasing levels of BPM to replace fish meal (minks) or soybean meal (pigs), so that up to 17% (P2), 20% (M2), 35% (P3), 40% (M3), 52% (P4), and 60% (M4) of digestible N was BPM derived. Protein turnover rate was measured by means of the end-product method using [15N]glycine as tracer and urinary nitrogen as end-product. In minks, protein flux, synthesis, and breakdown increased significantly with increasing dietary BPM. In pigs, diet had no observed effect on protein turnover rate. The intake of nucleic acid nitrogen (NAN) increased from 0.15 g/kg W0.75 on M1 to 0.26 g/kg W0.75 on M3 and M4 in the mink experiment, and from 0.08 g/kg W0.75 on P1 to 0.33 g/kg W0.75 on P4 in the pig experiment. Increased NAN intake led, in both experiments, to increased allantoin excretion. Analysis of species effects showed that minks excreted 1.72 mmol/ kg W0.75 of allantoin, significantly more than the 0.95 mmol/kg W0.75 excreted by pigs. In minks, approximately 96% of the excreted purine base derivatives consisted of allantoin, whereas in pigs approximately 93% did. Thus, increasing the dietary content of BPM increased protein turnover rate in minks but not in pigs, and allantoin excretion increased with increasing dietary BPM although it seemed that mink decomposed purine bases to their end-product more completely than pigs did. Collectively these data show that BPM is a suitable protein source for pigs and mink, and recorded differences between species were to a large extent due to differences in protein retention capacity and muscle mass.  相似文献   

16.
Eleven pigs were fitted with pancreatic and duodenal fistulae, and pancreatic juice collected permanently. Amylase, chymotrypsin, lipase and total proteins were determined in juice collected within 2 and 6 hours after different test-meals or intraduodenal loads of glucose and maltose. In the pancreatic juice of pigs adapted to a high-lipid diet and submitted to a high-carbohydrate test-meal the activity of amylase was increased by 50%. When the consumption of the high-lipid meal was associated with an intraduodenal load of 100 g of glucose all the enzyme activities were stimulated when compared to the effect of meal alone, but only the activity of amylase was significantly increased (+ 82%). In the juice of pigs adapted to a balanced diet and submitted to intraduodenal loads of 150 ml of water, 50 g of glucose, 50 g of maltose and 150 g of maltose, the enzyme activities remained almost constant with the load of water and 50 g of maltose but with 50 g of glucose and 150 g of maltose loads, amylase activity was increased by 20% and 30% respectively. It is suggested, that the exocrine pancreas of the pig adapts itself rapidly to the changes in the size of the intestinal pool of starch hydrolysis products.  相似文献   

17.
Balanites kernel cake (BKC) is produced from the fruit of Balanites aegyptiaca, a tree which is widely and densely distributed along the tropical belt of the African continent. The cake is characterized by high protein (36.8%) and low crude fibre (5.9%) contents. In this work the value of BKC as a source of crude protein in ruminant diets was compared with cotton seed cake (CSC), a conventional source of protein. Two groups of 10 and 11 lambs having an average liveweight of 20.5 ± 0.9 kg were used. For a 3-week preliminary period animals of both groups were fed ad libitum on a diet containing 30% CSC as a major source of protein. During the following 13 weeks the group of 10 lambs continued on the same diet, whereas the other group was fed ad libitum on a Balanites cake diet (20% BKC). All lambs were slaughtered at about 40 kg liveweight. No significant differences were detected between the two groups of lambs in feedlot performance or carcass analysis.It is concluded that BKC is non toxic to sheep and its addition at the rate of 20%, together with 10% straw, can replace 30% CSC in the diet. The Balanites cake diet was also found to be substantially cheaper.  相似文献   

18.
Thirty-six crossbred castrated male and female pigs, initially averaging 76.2 kg, were used in a nitrogen balance study to determine apparent digestible protein, apparent net protein utilization and apparent biological values of hydrolyzed hog hair (HHH) meal for pigs. The HHH meal contained 93.4% crude protein and 22.6 MJ per kg of gross energy. Digestibility of protein was linearly decreased (P < 0.01) as HHH meal was substituted for 25 and 50% of the maize and soya bean meal protein in a basal diet fortified with minerals and vitamins and containing 14% crude protein. There was a trend for apparent net protein utilization values to decrease and apparent biological values to increase as HHH meal was substituted. Assuming linearity, nitrogen utilization values (%) calculated by difference for HHH meal were: apparent digestible protein, 74.7 ± 1.6; apparent net protein utilization, 44.0 ± 3.4; apparent biological value, 57.2 ± 3.7.  相似文献   

19.
Four experiments were conducted in order to examine the growth and voluntary feed consumption of young growing pigs fed on barley-based diets containing as the sole protein supplement lupin-seed meal (LSM) from either Lupinus angustifolius cv. Uniwhite (UW), Uniharvest (UH) or L. albus cv. Neuland (NL).Under the restricted feeding regimen of the first experiment pigs receiving diets containing either 31% or 43% of either UW or UH grew at similar rates and with similar efficiency of feed utilisation from 27.5 to 85 kg live weight. By contrast, all pigs fed on diets containing these same proportions of NL refused such large amounts of feed immediately after the diets were offered that their growth halted.In the second and third experiments the voluntary feed consumption of pigs weighing 18 to 34 kg and receiving diets containing 37 to 43% of any of three distinct lines of NL was significantly less than those of pigs receiving UW diets, to the extent in some cases that body-weight loss occurred.In the fourth experiment the growth and voluntary feed intakes of 20 to 30 kg pigs fed on a control diet containing a mixture of fishmeal and dried blood as the protein supplement were greater than those of pigs fed a UW diet, which in turn were greater than those of pigs receiving NL as the source of supplementary protein. Reduction of the alkaloid content of NL by ethanol extraction resulted in a recovery of growth and feed intake to levels similar to those supported by the UW diet.  相似文献   

20.
Seventy-two pigs, initially weighing 4–5 kg, were fed on wheat-based diets supplemented with soya bean meal and/or meat meal in two experiments each of 4 weeks' duration.In the first experiment, 0, 25, 50 or 100% replacement of soya bean meal protein supplement with meat meal was associated with a linear decrease in weight gains (341-280 g/d), a linear increase in feed conversion ratios (1.64–2.35) and a linear decrease in apparent digestibility of dry matter (80.1–73.4%). There was no change in the apparent digestibility of nitrogen.In the second experiment, bone meal was added to provide 0.80, 1.55 and 3.05% calcium in diets in which the protein supplements were either soya bean meal or meat meal. The addition of bone meal to the diets containing soya bean meal did not affect the performance of the pigs, but it caused a linear decrease in the apparent digestibility of dry matter, nitrogen and calcium. The addition of bone meal to the diet containing meat meal reduced the feed intakes of the pigs from 617 to 516 g/d and the weight gains from 414 to 324 g/d.Weight gains of pigs were similar when their diets contained soya bean meal or meat meal as the protein supplement in the second experiment when the calcium content of the diets was 0.8%. The meat meal included in the diet was manufactured from soft offal.  相似文献   

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