4.6 Review

Beneficial and adverse effects of medicinal plants as feed supplements in poultry nutrition: a review

Journal

ANIMAL BIOTECHNOLOGY
Volume 33, Issue 2, Pages 369-391

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/10495398.2020.1798973

Keywords

Adverse effect; beneficial effect; medicinal plants and metabolites; micro-encapsulation; poultry nutrition

Funding

  1. Rasht Branch, Islamic Azad University

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Medicinal plants have a significant impact on the poultry industry, improving performance and productivity. However, some plants can also have adverse effects on egg production, egg quality, and microbiota counts. Certain plants and their extracts have the potential to enhance immunity, inhibit the growth of harmful bacteria, and improve the counts of beneficial bacteria. Additionally, some plants can improve egg yolk color, reduce fat content in meat, and increase fatty acid content in poultry tissues. Certain plant metabolites, such as carvacrol and thymol, play a crucial role as natural growth promoters for broiler chickens, affecting growth performance, nutrient availability, and immunity. The micro-encapsulation or nano-encapsulation of plant extracts and metabolites has shown promising results in improving growth performance in broiler chickens, suggesting its potential as an alternative to antibiotic growth promoters. This review emphasizes the importance of medicinal plants and their metabolites in poultry nutrition, highlighting their beneficial effects and suggesting their key role in the future of the poultry industry.
Medicinal plants exhibit colossal impact on poultry industries by improving its performance and productivity. However, some of these plants show adverse influence too by decreasing egg production percentage, egg mass, and microbiota counts. Green tea, nettle, pennyroyal, yarrow, and alfalfa in the form of seed, powder, and extract had vast potentiality to improve immunity, reduce the growth of pathogenic microbes, and improve the viable counts of lactic acid bacteria. Lavender, Alfalfa, and Nettle powder were able to improve egg yolk color. Furthermore, ginger reduced fat content in meat and increased color intensity. Flax seed increased alpha linolenic acid content in tissue, and increased n-3 fatty acid content in breast as well as thigh tissue. Physiological assessment showed that green tea, lavender, nettle, pennyroyal, and yarrow improved poultry immunity. Lavender and nettle improved internal organ traits. Interestingly, the use of flaxseed improved quail egg hatchability. Plants metabolites, particularly carvacrol and thymol showed its pivotal role as natural growth promoters by affecting growth performances, nutrient bioavailability, and immunity of broiler chickens. Additionally, in recent years, micro-encapsulation or nano-encapsulation of plant extracts and its metabolites improved growth performances of broiler chickens, thereby suggested wide utilization of this technique as a potential alternative to antibiotic growth promoters in future. This review sheds a light on beneficial as well as no adverse effects of some of the direct-fed important medicinal plants and its metabolites in poultry nutrition in order to suggest its key role in future poultry enterprise.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available