4.3 Article

The effect of synbiotics and probiotics on the growth performance, gastrointestinal function and health status of turkeys

Journal

ARCHIVES OF ANIMAL NUTRITION
Volume 75, Issue 5, Pages 376-388

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/1745039X.2021.1958646

Keywords

Blood composition; carcass quality; gastrointestinal tract; health indicators; performance traits; probiotics; synbiotics; turkeys

Funding

  1. Program of Applied Research
  2. National Center for Research and Development Synbiotic preparation for health prophylaxis of monogastric animals, prevention of bacterial diseases and poisonings caused by toxins, and enhancing nutrition safety and breeding productivity of animals [PBS3/A8/32/2015]

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The study showed that dietary supplementation with synbiotics and probiotics improved the growth performance and immune status of turkeys, leading to increased final body weights and improved immune responses. These additives also contributed to a decrease in the feed conversion ratio and crop and caecal pH levels.
The aim of this study was to evaluate the growth performance, gastrointestinal function and health status of turkeys fed diets supplemented with synbiotic preparations, as compared with commercial probiotic feed additives. The experiment lasted for 15 weeks. The research material comprised 600 female BIG 6 turkeys (6 treatments, 5 replicates, 20 birds per replicate). The turkeys from the control group (I) received a diet without additives. Groups II and III received a basal diet with the addition of probiotic BioPlus 2B or Cylactin at 0.4 g/kg diet, respectively. In groups IV, V and VI turkeys were fed diets with synbiotic preparations S1 (L. reuteri, L. plantarum, L. pentosus, S. cerevisiae + inulin), S2 (L. reuteri, L. plantarum, L. pentosus, S. cerevisiae, L. rhamnosus + inulin) and S3 (L. reuteri, L. plantarum, L. pentosus, S. cerevisiae, L. rhamnosus, L. paracasei + inulin) at 0.5 g/kg diet, respectively. The following parameters were monitored: growth performance, carcass quality, the chemical composition of meat, the structure (length, weight, villus height, crypt depth) and functional parameters (pH, viscosity) of selected segments of the gastrointestinal tract, and the health status of birds (lysozyme, gamma-globulins, ceruloplasmin and total protein). Dietary supplementation with probiotics and synbiotics contributed to an increase in the final body weights of turkeys, a decrease in the feed conversion ratio and an increase in values of the European Production Efficiency Factor (p <= 0.05). Synbiotics improved the immune status of birds by increasing serum gamma-globulin levels and decreasing ceruloplasmin activity at 8(th) week of age (p <= 0.05). Synbiotics and probiotics also contributed to a decrease in crop and caecal pH (p <= 0.05). The analysed additives had no effect on carcass dressing percentage, carcass quality characteristics or the chemical composition of breast muscles. The tested synbiotics as well as commercial probiotics can be valuable feed additives, improving the growth performance and immune status of turkeys.

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