4.6 Article

Effects of Sunflower Meal Supplementation as a Complementary Protein Source in the Laying Hen's Diet on Productive Performance, Egg Quality, and Nutrient Digestibility

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SUSTAINABILITY
卷 13, 期 6, 页码 -

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MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/su13063557

关键词

sunflower meal; laying hens; performance; yolk cholesterol; yolk fatty acids; egg quality

资金

  1. Taif University Researchers Supporting Project, Taif University, Taif, Saudi Arabia [TURSP-2020/09]

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The study showed that the inclusion of sunflower meal in laying hen diets can improve laying rate, reduce feed conversion ratio and broken egg rate, enhance egg quality, increase content of vitamin E, calcium, and unsaturated fatty acids in egg yolk, and decrease egg yolk cholesterol.
The practical usage of untraditional feedstuffs such as sunflower meal (SFM) in laying hens nutrition in developing countries has received considerable attention. SFM is a by-product of the sunflower oil industry and has been progressively added to bird's diets. Sunflower meal (SFM) is gaining great interest as a feed ingredient due to its eminent crude protein content, low anti-nutritional compounds, and low price. The current experiment was aimed to assess the production efficiency, egg quality, yolk fatty acids composition, and nutrient digestibility of laying hens fed SFM. A total of 162 Bovans Brown laying hens aged 60 weeks old were randomly allocated using a completely randomized design into three experimental groups of nine replicates each (n = six/replicate) for eight weeks. The dietary treatments involved a control (basal diet) and two levels of SFM, 50 and 100 g/kg feed. The dietary treatments did not influence live weight gain, feed intake, and egg mass. On one hand, the laying rate was increased; on the other hand, the feed conversion ratio and broken eggs rate of laying hens were decreased (p < 0.05) by the dietary inclusion of SFM. Dietary treatments had no effect on the egg's quality characteristics except the yolk color and yolk height were larger (p = 0.01) for laying hens fed SFM compared with those fed the control. Dietary inclusion of SFM decreased (p < 0.05) the content of cholesterol in the egg yolk. Still, it increased the yolk contents of vitamin E, calcium, linoleic acid, linolenic acid, and oleic acid (p < 0.05). Furthermore, the dietary inclusion of SFM increased crude protein and calcium digestibility, but decreased the ether extract digestibility. In conclusion, our results suggested that the dietary inclusion of SFM, up to 100 g/kg at a late phase of laying, could improve the production performance, some of the egg quality traits, and nutrient digestibility while decreasing egg yolk cholesterol.

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