4.7 Article

Apparent metabolizable energy of cereal grains for broiler chickens is influenced by age

Journal

POULTRY SCIENCE
Volume 100, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.psj.2021.101288

Keywords

age; broiler; Apparent metabolizable energy; cereal

Funding

  1. AgriFutures Australian Chicken Meat Program

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This study investigated the influence of broiler age on the apparent metabolizable energy (AME) and nitrogen-corrected AME (AMEn) of wheat, sorghum, barley, and corn. The results showed that bird age significantly impacted the energy values of these cereal grains, with different grains displaying varying responses to age.
The current study was conducted to investigate the influence of broiler age on the AME and AMEn of 4 common cereal grains (wheat, sorghum, bar-ley, and corn). Four experimental diets with the same inclusion (962 g/kg) of each grain were developed and fed to groups of broiler chickens aged 1 to 7, 8 to 14, 15 to 21, 22 to 28, 29 to 35, or 36 to 42 d post-hatch. Each diet, in pellet form, was randomly allocated to 6 repli-cate cages in each age group. Except for the 0 to 7 d age group, the birds were fed a starter (d 0-21) and/or a fin-isher (d 21-35) diet before the introduction of experi-mental diets. The number of birds per cage were 10 (d 1 -7) and 8 (d 8-42). Excreta were collected over the last 4 d of each age period. The AME and AMEn of the grains were determined by the total excreta collection. Bird age influenced (P < 0.001) the AME and AMEn of all cereal grains. The AMEn of wheat declined quadrati-cally (P < 0.01) with advancing age, from 3,461 kcal/kg in wk 1 to 3,219 kcal/kg in wk 2 and then plateaued. The AMEn of sorghum grain declined linearly (P < 0.001) with advancing age, from 3,762 kcal/kg in wk 1 to 3,614 kcal/kg in wk 2, plateaued to wk 5 and then declined to 3,556 kcal/kg in wk 6. A quadratic (P < 0.001) reduction in the AMEn of barley was observed as birds grew older, with the AMEn decreasing between wk 1 (3,286 kcal/kg) and wk 2 (2,988 kcal/kg), increasing in wk 3 (3,117 kcal/kg) and then plateauing. The AMEn of corn declined quadratically (P < 0.05) with advancing broiler age; the highest AMEn was observed in wk 1 and 5, the lowest AMEn in wk 2, with the other weeks being intermediate. In conclusion, the present results showed that broiler age has a substantial impact on the AME and AMEn of cereal grains and the effect varied depend-ing on the cereal grain. These data suggest that age dependent AME and AMEn values may need to be con -sidered when formulating broiler diets to improve the precision of feed formulation and production efficiency.

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