1. Effects of Environment, Feed Form, and Caloric Density on Energy Partitioning, Subsequent Performance and immune response
- Author
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I. Holáskova, B. G. Glover, J. S. Moritz, K.J. Ryan, J.W. Boney, J.M. Hadfield, and K. L. Foltz
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Litter (animal) ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,Split plot ,Animal science ,Chemistry ,Live weight ,Randomized block design ,Energy partitioning ,Caloric theory ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Feed conversion ratio - Abstract
SUMMARY Past literature lacks studies that compare diets containing an improved feed form vs. an increased energy. The objective of the study was to assess the effect of variations of feed form and dietary caloric density on broilers reared on clean shavings and built-up litter. Treatments were arranged in a 2 × 2 factorial randomized block design within a split plot. Whole plot treatments considered one room (11 × 7.32 m) of either clean shavings or built-up litter; divided into 16 treatment replications of either standard (30%) or improved (80% feed form), and 16 replications of either commercial or increased (+110 kcal/kg) dietary caloric density comprising the 2 × 2 factorial arrangement. Broilers consuming an improved feed form demonstrated an improved feed intake, live weight gain, feed conversion ratio, breast weight and breast yield (P 0.05) compared to broilers provided standard feed form at increased energy regardless of environment. These data suggest feed form improvements may partition energy towards growth more than feeding an increased energy diet.
- Published
- 2018
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