4.2 Article

Evaluation of xylanase in low-energy broiler diets

Journal

JOURNAL OF APPLIED POULTRY RESEARCH
Volume 23, Issue 2, Pages 188-195

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.3382/japr.2013-00856

Keywords

broiler; xylanase; nonstarch polysaccharide; performance

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The objective of the current study was to evaluate the effect of feeding a thermo-tolerant xylanase in low-energy broiler diets on performance and processing parameters. Evaluation criteria included average broiler BW, FCR, livability, carcass yield, and fat pad yields. The experimental design consisted of 3 nutrient profiles: positive control, negative control 1 (-66 kcal/kg), and negative control 2 (-132 kcal/kg). Two xylanase inclusion programs were included in the negative control 1 and 2 diets; 60 g/t was included in the starter and grower diets with either 60 or 100 g/t in the finisher and withdrawal diets, yielding a total of 7 treatment groups with 8 replicate pens per treatment each containing 42-d-old straight-run chicks per treatment (2,352 total broilers). Broilers were reared in floor pens through 45 d of age. The dietary program consisted of 5 dietary phases: starter (1-15 d), grower 1 (16-23 d), grower 2 (24-31 d), finisher (32-38 d), and withdrawal (39-45 d). Body weights and feed consumption were determined on days of dietary changes, including d 15, 23, 31, 38, and 45. On d 45, 4 male and 4 female broilers per replicate (448 total) were subjected to an 8-h feed withdrawal period and processed to obtain carcass and fat pad weights. Reducing the dietary energy level increased FCR and decreased the fat pad weight of broilers in the negative control 2 treatment compared with the positive control. Inclusion of xylanase during the starter phase increased d 15 BW and reduced FCR. The inclusion of xylanase continued to reduce FCR throughout the trial, as compared with diets without xylanase inclusion. Within this study, we have demonstrated the effectiveness of xylanase inclusion in reduced-energy diets (-66 and -132 kcal/kg) to improve FCR of broilers to that of broilers fed energy-adequate diets.

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