1. Including dietary fiber and resistant starch to increase satiety and reduce aggression in gestating sows1,2
- Author
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A. Sapkota, B. T. Richert, Jeremy N. Marchant-Forde, and Donald C. Lay
- Subjects
food.ingredient ,040301 veterinary sciences ,Animal feed ,Starch ,animal diseases ,0403 veterinary science ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,food ,Lactation ,Genetics ,medicine ,Food science ,Resistant starch ,Meal ,biology ,0402 animal and dairy science ,food and beverages ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,General Medicine ,biology.organism_classification ,040201 dairy & animal science ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,Satiety Response ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Sugar beet ,Dietary fiber ,Food Science - Abstract
Aggression during mixing of pregnant sows impacts sow welfare and productivity. The aim of this study was to increase satiety and reduce aggression by including dietary fiber and fermentable carbohydrates. Sows were housed in individual stalls 7 to 14 d after breeding (moving day was considered d 0 of treatment) and were fed (at 0700 h) with a CONTROL (corn-soybean meal based with no additional fiber sources), RSTARCH (10.8% resistant starch), BEETPULP (27.2% sugar beet pulp), SOYHULLS (19.1% soybean hulls), or INCSOY (14.05% soybean hulls) for 21 d (5 sows/diet × 5 diets × 8 replications = 200 sows). The CONTROL diet was targeted to contain 185 g(d∙sow) NDF and the other diets were targeted to contain 350 g(d∙sow) NDF. The INCSOY diet was fed at 2.2 kg/(d∙sow) and the other diets were fed at 2 kg(d∙sow). On d 22, sows were mixed in groups of 5 (at 1200 h). Behaviors in stalls (on d 1, 7, 14, and 21) and after mixing (d 22 and 23), heart rate (on d 1, 7, 14, and 21), blood metabolites (on d 2, 8, 15, 22, and 25), and the effects of diets on production were collected and analyzed. Sows stood more ( 0.05). Average birth weight was lowest in the INCSOY diet ( = 0.02). This study demonstrates that RSTARCH and SOYHULLS can improve the welfare of sows by reducing aggression and increasing satiety in limit-fed pregnant sows without affecting production.
- Published
- 2016
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