4.7 Article

Effects of protein level and digestibility on the growth and carcass characteristics of broiler chickens

Journal

POULTRY SCIENCE
Volume 90, Issue 3, Pages 595-603

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.3382/ps.2010-01098

Keywords

protein; digestibility; broiler; growth performance; carcass yield

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (Ottawa, Ontario, Canada)
  2. Evonik-Degussa GmbH (Hanau, Germany)

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A study was conducted to evaluate the effects of dietary protein level and protein digestibility on the growth performance and carcass characteristics of broilers from 1 to 35 d of age. Broiler chickens (n = 320) were fed 4 different ideal protein-balanced, isocalori.c diets in a 2 x 2 factorial design with 2 levels of protein [high protein (Hi Pro; 20 and 18% or 200 and 180 g/kg) and low protein (LoPro; 18 and 16% or 180 and 160 g/kg) on d 1 to 14 and d 15 to 35, respectively] and 2 levels of protein digestibility [high digestibility (Hi Dig) and low digestibility (LoDig); approximately 85% and 80% CP digestibility, respectively]. The HiDig diets were formulated using soybean meal and fishmeal, whereas the LoDig diets used wheat distillers dried grains with solubles and meat and bone meal as the primary protein. sources. The standardized ileal digestibility (SID) values of the wheat distillers dried grains with solubles and meat and bone meal (56.5 and 72.0% SID for lysine, respectively) were measured before the experiment to improve the accuracy of the diet formulations. During the starter phase, the interaction was significant for ADG; birds fed the LoPro-LoDig diet grew slower than birds fed the other 3 diets (P < 0.05). During the grower phase, the interaction was significant for ADFI; birds fed the LoPro-LoDig diet had the lowest ADFI compared with those fed the other 3 diets. The interaction between protein level and digestibility was significant for the SID of most of the AA and was significantly higher for birds fed the HiPro-HiDig diet compared with those fed the other 3 diets. Total breast meat yield was significantly higher in birds fed the Hi Pro diets than in those fed the LoPro diets, whereas birds fed the Hi Dig diets had significantly more abdominal fat than those fed the LoDig diets. The results suggest that low-protein diets can support growth performance equal to high-protein diets when highly digestible ingredients are used. However, maximum breast meat yield requires a high-protein diet and is not affected by ingredient digestibility.

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