1. The effect of added oat hulls or sugar beet pulp to diets containing rapidly or slowly digestible protein sources on broiler growth performance from 0 to 36 days of age
- Author
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J.D. Berrocoso, A. García-Ruiz, G. Page, and N.W. Jaworski
- Subjects
dietary fiber ,growth performance ,oat hull ,protein digestion kinetics ,sugar beet pulp ,Animal culture ,SF1-1100 - Abstract
The effects of formulating broiler diets that contain sources of either rapidly or slowly digestible protein and 2 different dietary fiber sources on growth performance were studied in broilers chickens from 0 to 36 d of age. A total of 1,920 one-day-old, male Ross 708 broiler chickens were randomly allocated and housed in 48 floor pens (40 birds/pen) to one of 4 dietary treatments. Birds were allotted according to a completely randomized block design using a factorial arrangement of treatments with 2 protein digestion rates (rapidly or slowly) and 2 dietary fiber sources [3% oat hulls (OH) or 3% sugar beet pulp (SBP)] from 0 to 36 d of age. All diets were formulated to be isocaloric and isonitrogenous. The pen was the experimental unit for all variables studied (12 replicates/treatment). Data were analyzed using the MIXED procedure of SAS, and the model included the main effects of the protein digestion rate, dietary fiber source, and their interaction. There were 3 experimental feeding phases; starter (from day 0–14), grower (from day 14–28), and finisher (from day 28–36). Results indicated that broilers fed diets containing sources that supplied more rapidly digestible protein had 4% greater (P
- Published
- 2020
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