4.7 Article

Graded methionine dietary inclusions influence growth performance and apparent ileal amino acid digestibility coefficients and disappearance rates in broiler chickens

期刊

ANIMAL NUTRITION
卷 8, 期 -, 页码 160-168

出版社

KEAI PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.aninu.2021.06.017

关键词

Amino acid; Broiler chicken; Methionine

资金

  1. Australian Government Research and Training Program International Scholarship (RTP)

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This study investigated the effects of graded quantities of L-methionine on the digestibility of methionine in feed and the concentrations of free amino acids. The results showed that 3.43 g/kg L-methionine supported maximum weight gain, while 3.50 g/kg L-methionine resulted in the lowest feed conversion ratio.
Graded quantities of 1.38, 2.76 and 4.14 g/kg L-methionine were included in a control diet formulated to contain 3.07 g/kg digestible methionine. Each of the 4 dietary treatments was offered to 6 replicate cages (initially 8 birds per cage) from 1 to 21 d post-hatch. The parameters assessed included growth per-formance, nutrient utilisation (apparent metabolizable energy [AME], AME:GE ratios, N retention, N-corrected apparent metabolizable energy [AMEn]), apparent digestibility coefficients and disappearance rates of amino acids in the distal ileum. They also included free amino concentrations in systemic plasma (brachial vein) at 20 d post-hatch and in hepatic tissue at 14 and 21 d post-hatch. Graded L-methionine inclusions quadratically influenced weight gain (r = 0.688; P = 0.001) and FCR (r = 0.780; P < 0.001). It may be deduced from the quadratic regressions that 3.43 g/kg L-methionine supported maximum weight gain of 1,036 g/kg and 3.50 g/kg L-methionine minimum FCR of 1.193, from 1 to 21 d post-hatch. The control diet contained specified levels of 3.07 g/kg digestible methionine and 13.0 g/kg digestible lysine. Thus, an inclusion of 3.465 g/kg L-methionine corresponded to a total of 6.535 g/kg methionine or a methionine-to-lysine ratio of 50.3, which is higher than standard recommendations. The implications of this and other outcomes of the present study are reported and discussed. (c) 2021 Chinese Association of Animal Science and Veterinary Medicine. Publishing services by Elsevier B.V. on behalf of KeAi Communications Co. Ltd. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).

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