204 results on '"Wilson G. Pond"'
Search Results
2. Animal Agriculture : Research To Meet Human Needs In The 21st Century
- Author
-
Wilson G. Pond and Wilson G. Pond
- Subjects
- Livestock--Research--Congresses, Food of animal origin--Research--Congresses, Animal industry--Research--Congresses, Livestock--Congresses, Food of animal origin--Congresses, Animal industry--Congresses
- Abstract
First published in 1980. Animal agriculture serves human needs. Three-fourths of the protein, one-third of the energy, most of the calcium and phosphorus and substantial amounts of essential vitamins and other minerals in the American diet are from animal products. Recognizing that innovative research holds the key to meeting these challenges, 210 concerned individuals convened at Boyne Mountain, Michigan, May 4 to 9, 1980. Their goal was to identify priorities for future research to enable animal agriculture to efficiently and effectively serve human needs in the 21st century. These proceedings represent the best collective judgment on research priorities by a group of informed and dedicated people concerned with the future role of animal agriculture in meeting human needs.
- Published
- 2019
3. Dietary supplementation with cholesterol and docosahexaenoic acid increases the activity of the arginine-nitric oxide pathway in tissues of young pigs
- Author
-
Sung Woo Kim, Sujay Datta, Peng Li, Xilong Li, Wilson G. Pond, and Guoyao Wu
- Subjects
Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Docosahexaenoic Acids ,Arginine ,Swine ,Physiology ,Blotting, Western ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Nitric Oxide ,Endothelial NOS ,Biochemistry ,Article ,Cholesterol, Dietary ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Citrulline ,Animals ,GTP Cyclohydrolase ,Muscle, Skeletal ,Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid ,Analysis of Variance ,biology ,Eicosanoid metabolism ,Brain ,Tetrahydrobiopterin ,Biopterin ,Nitric oxide synthase ,Endocrinology ,Animals, Newborn ,Liver ,chemistry ,Docosahexaenoic acid ,Dietary Supplements ,Nitric Oxide Pathway ,biology.protein ,lipids (amino acids, peptides, and proteins) ,Nitric Oxide Synthase ,NADP ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Nutrients, such as dietary lipids, can influence development of the central nervous system [1, 2]. Particularly, an increase in plasma concentrations of cholesterol, which is an essential constituent of all animal cells (especially of brain) and abundant in milk, is positively associated with enhancement of cerebrum weight gain and behavioral development [2–4]. Additionally, docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) is a component of complex lipid in membranes, nerve insulation, as well as a precursor for signaling molecules (including prostaglandins). The availability of long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acids, including DHA, also modulates eicosanoid metabolism and myelination during growth spurt of the brain [5,6]. Interestingly, dietary DHA supply enhances visual and neurological development both in prematurely born infants [7] and in term infants [8,9], while promoting problem-solving and childhood intelligence [10]. The beneficial influences of dietary cholesterol and DHA on brain development are currently interpreted as modification of the membrane structure and functions of membrane-associated proteins [11]. Nitric oxide (NO), synthesized from L-arginine by NO synthase (NOS), plays an important role in development and function of the brain [12]. All isoforms of the NOS [neuronal NOS (nNOS), endothelial NOS (eNOS), and inducible NOS (iNOS)] are present in neurological tissue. Of particular interest, nNOS activity is decreased when the protein is phosphorylated at the inhibition site of Ser 852, whereas eNOS activity is increased when the enzyme is phosphorylated at the activation site of Ser 1177 [12]. GTP-CH activity, Tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4), which is synthesized from GTP via the GTP cyclohydrolase I (GTP-CH) pathway [13], is an essential cofactor of NOS [14]. NO is a potent signal that regulates many physiological processes affecting behavior and cognitive function, including synaptic plasticity during long term potentiation and depression [15]. NO also acts as a retrograde messenger to stabilize or refine synapse during development, as a regulatory second messenger involved in the control of brain blood flow, and as an agent that contributes to both brain degeneration and neuropotection [16]. Additionally, NO promotes angiogenesis, redox state, cell immunity, and neuronal survival [14,17]. Cholesterol and DHA are known to regulate NO synthesis in vascular endothelial cells [17]. We hypothesized that dietary supplementation with cholesterol and DHA can influence the arginine-NO pathway in the brain of neonatal animals. This hypothesis was tested with piglets by measuring NOS activity, total and phosphorylated levels for the three NOS isoforms, as well as concentrations of arginine, BH4 and NADPH in brain. To determine whether the effects of DHA and cholesterol are specific to the neuronal tissue, we also analyzed the above parameters in skeletal muscle and liver.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Dietary supplementation with cholesterol and docosahexaenoic acid affects concentrations of amino acids in tissues of young pigs
- Author
-
Sujay Datta, Sung Woo Kim, Wilson G. Pond, Peng Li, Guoyao Wu, and Xilong Li
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Taurine ,Docosahexaenoic Acids ,Sus scrofa ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Carnosine ,Biology ,Biochemistry ,Article ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Ammonia ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Urea ,Amino Acids ,Muscle, Skeletal ,Methionine ,Cholesterol ,Organic Chemistry ,Brain ,food and beverages ,Metabolism ,Glutamine ,Endocrinology ,Liver ,chemistry ,Docosahexaenoic acid ,Dietary Supplements ,Female ,lipids (amino acids, peptides, and proteins) ,Leucine - Abstract
Cholesterol and docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) are important nutrients for neural development of infants. However, little is known about the effect of cholesterol or DHA on concentrations of amino acids (AA) in neonatal tissues. This study was conducted with the piglet (an established model for studying human infant nutrition) to test the hypothesis that dietary supplementation with the lipids may modulate AA availability in tissues. Sixteen newborn pigs were nursed by sows for 24 h and then assigned to one of four treatment groups, representing supplementation with 0.0% (control), 0.2% cholesterol, 0.2% DHA, or cholesterol plus DHA to the basal milk-formula. All piglets were euthanized at 49 days of age. In brain, cholesterol supplementation reduced (P < 0.05) concentrations of glutamate, serine, glutamine, threonine, β-alanine, alanine, methionine, isoleucine, leucine, and γ-aminobutyrate but increased (P < 0.05) concentrations of glycine and lysine, whereas DHA supplementation similarly affected (P < 0.05) concentrations of the same AA (except for isoleucine and lysine) and taurine. In addition, concentrations of most AA in liver, muscle and plasma were substantially altered by dietary supplementation of cholesterol and DHA in a tissue-dependent manner. Further, DHA reduced concentrations of carnosine in skeletal muscle, as well as ammonia in both plasma and brain. The results reveal that cholesterol and DHA can regulate AA metabolism and availability in various tissues of piglets. These novel findings have important implications for designing the next generation of infant formula to optimize neonatal growth and development.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Effects of combining three fungal phytases with a bacterial phytase on plasma phosphorus status of weanling pigs fed a corn-soy diet1
- Author
-
Chad H. Stahl, K. R. Roneker, Xin Gen Lei, and Wilson G. Pond
- Subjects
chemistry.chemical_classification ,Meal ,Phosphoric monoester hydrolases ,Phosphorus ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Weanling ,General Medicine ,Biology ,Microbiology ,Enzyme ,Animal science ,chemistry ,Genetics ,Alkaline phosphatase ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Phytase ,Food Science - Abstract
The objective of this study was to determine possible synergistic effects of supplementing one of three fungal phytases: Aspergillus fumitagus PhyA (AFP),A. niger PhyA (ANP), or Peniophora lyci phytase (PLP) with an Escherichia coli AppA phytase (EP) in diets for pigs. Three experiments, each lasting for 4 wk, were conducted with a total of 106 weanling pigs (5 wk old). The corn-soybean meal basal diet (BD) contained no supplemental inorganic P. In Exp. 1, 35 pigs (8.6 +/- 1.0 kg BW) were fed (as-fed basis) BD + AFP at 750 U/ kg of feed, BD + inorganic P (0.2% P), or BD + PLP at 500, 750, or 1,000 U/kg feed. Pigs fed BD + AFP or BD + 0.2% P had higher (P < 0.05) plasma inorganic P concentrations than those fed BD + PLP at the end of the trial (wk 4). In Exp. 2, 35 pigs (8.1 +/- 0.9 kg BW) were fed BD + AFP, EP, PLP, a 1:1 mix of AFP:EP, or a 1:1 mix of PLP:EP at 500 U/kg. Pigs fed the AFP:EP mixture had growth performance and plasma measures similar to those fed either enzyme alone. Pigs fed the PLP:EP mixture had lower (P < 0.05) plasma alkaline phosphatase activity than those fed BD + PLP. Pigs fed BD + PLP had lower (P < 0.05) plasma inorganic P concentrations than pigs fed BD + EP, and higher (P < 0.05) plasma alkaline phosphatase activity than all other groups at wk 4. In Exp. 3, 36 pigs (9.1 +/- 1.2 kg BW) were fed BD + ANP, EP, or a 1:1 mix of ANP:EP at 500 U/kg feed. Pigs fed the two enzymes together had lower (P < 0.05) plasma inorganic P concentration than those fed BD + EP and lower (P < 0.05) plasma alkaline phosphatase activity than pigs fed BD + ANP at wk 4. In conclusion, although the four phytases showed different effects on plasma P status of weanling pigs, there was no synergistic effect between any of the three fungal phytases and the bacterial phytase on the plasma measures or growth performance under the conditions of the present study.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Effectiveness of an experimental consensus phytase in improving dietary phytate-phosphorus utilization by weanling pigs1
- Author
-
K. R. Roneker, Wilson G. Pond, S. E. Crowe, Xin Gen Lei, and J. M. Gentile
- Subjects
Meal ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Phytic acid ,Animal feed ,Weanling ,General Medicine ,Biology ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Endocrinology ,Animal science ,chemistry ,Internal medicine ,Genetics ,medicine ,Weaning ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Phytase ,Phosphorus utilization ,medicine.symptom ,Weight gain ,Food Science - Abstract
Consensus phytase is a new biosynthetic, heat-stable enzyme derived from the sequences of multiple homologous phytases. Two experiments were conducted to determine its effectiveness, relative to inorganic P and a mutant enzyme of Escherichia coli phytase (Mutant-EP), in improving dietary phytate-P availability to pigs. In Exp. 1, 36 pigs (3 wk old, 7.00 +/- 0.24 kg of BW) were fed a low-P corn-soybean meal basal diet plus consensus phytase at 0, 250, 500, 750, 1,000, or 1,250 U/kg of feed for 5 wk. Plasma inorganic P concentration, plasma alkaline phosphatase activity, bone strength, and overall ADG and gain:feed ratio of pigs were improved (P < 0.05) by consensus phytase in both linear (R2 = 0.20 to 0.70) and quadratic (R2 = 0.30 to 0.70) dose-dependent fashions. In Exp. 2, 36 pigs (4 wk old, 9.61 +/- 0.52 kg BW) were fed the basal diet + inorganic P at 0.1 or 0.2%, consensus phytase at 750 or 450 U/kg of feed, Mutant-EP at 450 U/kg of feed, or 225 U consensus + 225 U Mutant-EP/kg of feed. Pigs fed 750 U of consensus phytase or 450 U of Mutant-EP/kg feed had plasma inorganic concentrations and bone strength that fell between those of pigs fed 0.1 or 0.2% inorganic P. These two measures were 16 to 29% lower (P < 0.05) in pigs fed 450 U of consensus phytase/kg of feed than those of pigs fed 0.2% inorganic P. Plasma inorganic P concentrations were 14 to 29% higher (P < 0.05) in pigs fed Mutant-EP vs. consensus phytase at 450 U/kg at wk 2 and 3. In conclusion, the experimental consensus phytase effectively releases phytate P from the corn-soy diet for weanling pigs. The inorganic P equivalent of 750 U of consensus phytase/kg of feed may fall between 0.1 and 0.2%, but this requires further determination.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Dietary Fatty Acids and Cholesterol in Normal Brain Development
- Author
-
Wilson G. Pond
- Subjects
chemistry.chemical_compound ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Brain development ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Cholesterol ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,General Medicine - Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Pork Production Systems : Efficient Use of Swine and Feed Resources
- Author
-
Wilson G. Pond, Jerome H. Maner, Dewey L. Harris, Wilson G. Pond, Jerome H. Maner, and Dewey L. Harris
- Subjects
- Swine, Swine--Feeding and feeds, Pork, Swine--United States
- Abstract
Pork continues to occupy an important position as a food source in affluent societies as well as in developing countries with slower economic growth. The growth of the world swine population continues at a faster rate than that of the human population, a reflection of the sustained demand for pork in all parts of the world. The technical basis for commercial production of swine was presented in our two earlier textbooks-Swine Production in Temperate and Tropical Environ ments, by Pond and Maner, 1974, and Swine Production and Nutrition, by Pond and Maner, 1984. In view of rapidly advancing technology and an appreciation for the systems approach in industry and agriculture, this third book has been restructured to provide the student and practitioner with an integrated concept of pork production. We have attempted to blend the fundamental principles from genetics, physiology, nutrition, and biotechnology into the modern concepts of systems analysis and simulation modeling. The objective is to create a teaching approach which empha sizes the integrated synthesis of biological with physical and environmental sci ences and economics. This approach is expected to provide an overall pork pro duction systems view that individual producers can adapt to their specific resources, needs, and goals. Our new co-author, Dr. Dewey Harris, has used his expertise and perspective on interacting systems to change the complexion of the book to fulfill this objective. In addition, Dr.
- Published
- 2012
9. Maternal Dietary Protein Deficiency Decreases Nitric Oxide Synthase and Ornithine Decarboxylase Activities in Placenta and Endometrium of Pigs During Early Gestation
- Author
-
Sean P. Flynn, Fuller W. Bazer, Guoyao Wu, Wilson G. Pond, and Troy L. Ott
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Swine ,Placenta ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Gestational Age ,Biology ,Ornithine Decarboxylase ,Endometrium ,Ornithine decarboxylase ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Fetus ,Pregnancy ,Protein Deficiency ,Internal medicine ,Polyamines ,medicine ,Animals ,Conceptus ,Amino Acids ,Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,Ornithine ,Nitric oxide synthase ,Cholesterol ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,biology.protein ,Citrulline ,Female ,Dietary Proteins ,Nitric Oxide Synthase ,Polyamine - Abstract
Little is known about the mechanism responsible for retarded placental and fetal growth induced by maternal dietary protein malnutrition. On the basis of the recent finding that nitric oxide (NO) and polyamines (products of L-arginine) play an important role in embryonic and placental development, the present study was designed to determine whether protein deficiency decreases placental and endometrial activities of NO synthase (NOS) and ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) (the first and key regulatory enzyme in polyamine synthesis). Primiparous gilts selected genetically for low or high plasma total cholesterol concentrations (low line and high line, respectively) were mated and then fed 1.8 kg/d of isocaloric diets containing 13% or 0.5% crude protein. At d 40 or 60 of gestation, they were hysterectomized, and placenta and endometrium were obtained for incubations, NOS and ODC assays, and measurements of free amino acids and polyamines. Maternal dietary protein restriction decreased arginine and ornithine concentrations, constitutive and inducible NOS activities and NO production, as well as ODC activity and polyamine concentrations in placenta and endometrium of both lines of gilts. Placental NO synthase activity and NO generation were lower in high line gilts than in low line gilts. ODC activities and polyamine concentrations in placenta and endometrium were decreased at d 60 compared with d 40 of gestation. These changes in placental and endometrial synthesis of NO and polyamines during early gestation may be a mechanism responsible for reduced placental and fetal growth in protein-deficient gilts and for altered conceptus development in high line gilts.
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Pigs Fed Cholesterol Neonatally Have Increased Cerebrum Cholesterol as Young Adults
- Author
-
Wilson G. Pond, T. L. Graf, Young W. Park, Harry J. Mersmann, D. R. Su, S. L. Boleman, Lennart Krook, and Jeffrey W. Savell
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Brain development ,Swine ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Biology ,Subcutaneous fat ,Cholesterol, Dietary ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Suidae ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Tissue Distribution ,Young adult ,Triglycerides ,Cerebral Cortex ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,Cholesterol ,Cerebrum ,biology.organism_classification ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Longissimus ,Animals, Newborn ,chemistry ,Female ,lipids (amino acids, peptides, and proteins) ,Dietary Cholesterol - Abstract
Sixty-eight female neonatal pigs selected for seven (Experiment 1) or eight (Experiment 2) generations for high (HG) or low (LG) plasma cholesterol were used to test the hypothesis that neonatal dietary cholesterol fed during the first 4 or 8 wk of postnatal life increases the cholesterol content of the cerebrum in young adulthood following free access to a high-fat (15%), high-cholesterol (0.5%) diet from 8 to 20 or 24 wk of age. Pigs were removed from their dams at 1 d of age and given free access to a sow-milk replacer diet containing 9.5% coconut fat and 0 or 0.5 % cholesterol. All pigs (except four HG and four LG pigs in Experiment 2, which were deprived of cholesterol throughout the study) were fed the high-fat, high-cholesterol diet from 8 wk to termination at 20 or 24 wk of age. Cerebrum weight and cholesterol concentration were higher in pigs fed cholesterol neonatally than in those deprived of cholesterol neonatally in both experiments, but weight and cholesterol concentration were unaffected by genetic line. Cholesterol concentrations in longissimus and semitendinosus muscles and in subcutaneous fat were unaffected by diet or genetic line. We conclude that dietary cholesterol deprivation during the first 4 to 8 wk of life in piglets is associated with lower cholesterol concentration and total content in the young adult cerebrum than in pigs supplemented with cholesterol in early life. These data support previous observations and suggest the possibility of a metabolic need for neonatal dietary cholesterol in normal brain development.
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Effect of neonatal dietary cholesterol deprivation in pigs with genetically high or low plasma cholesterol on plasma lipids and early atherogenesis
- Author
-
Lennart Krook, Jeffrey W. Savell, H. J. Mersmann, T. L. Graf, S. L. Boleman, Wilson G. Pond, and D.-R. Su
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Aorta ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,Cholesterol ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Biology ,Lesion ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Endocrinology ,High-density lipoprotein ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,Plasma cholesterol ,Internal medicine ,medicine.artery ,Circulatory system ,medicine ,lipids (amino acids, peptides, and proteins) ,medicine.symptom ,Dietary Cholesterol ,Blood vessel - Abstract
Sixty-eight neonatal female pigs from populations selected for high (HG) or low (LG) plasma total cholesterol were used in two experiments to test the hypothesis that dietary cholesterol deprivation during the first 4 or 8 weeks of postnatal life increases plasma total cholesterol and exacerbates early aortic atherogenic lesions following free access to a high fat (15 g/100g)-high cholesterol (0.5 g/100g) diet from 4 or 8 weeks to 5 or 6 mo of age. Pigs were removed from their dam at one d of age and given free access to a modified sow-milk replacer diet containing 0 or 0.5% crystalline cholesterol. In each experiment, half of the HG and LG pigs were fed a sow-milk replacer diet containing 0 cholesterol and half were fed the same diet containing 0.5% added cholesterol. All pigs (except HG and Lg pigs in experiment 2 deprived of cholesterol throughout) were fed a 15% fat-0.5% cholesterol diet from 57 d to 6 mo (experiment 1) or 5 mo (experiment 2) of age. Overall total cholesterol and high density lipoprotein cholesterol were greater in HG than in LG pigs (P
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Response to dietary fat and cholesterol in young adult boars genetically selected for high or low plasma cholesterol1
- Author
-
Wilson G. Pond, C D Lu, D R Su, Harry J. Mersmann, Lennart Krook, Jeffrey W. Savell, and J J Harris
- Subjects
endocrine system ,medicine.medical_specialty ,urogenital system ,Cholesterol ,Insulin ,medicine.medical_treatment ,General Medicine ,Metabolism ,Biology ,people.cause_of_death ,Electrocution ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Endocrinology ,Plasma cholesterol ,chemistry ,Internal medicine ,Genetics ,medicine ,Genetic selection ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Young adult ,people ,Dietary fat ,Food Science - Abstract
Twenty-eight young adult boars (age 7 to 8 mol genetically selected for four generations for high (HG) or low (LG) plasma cholesterol were studied to assess dietary and genetic effects and their interactions on cholesterol metabolism. Boars within a genetic group were paired according to their plasma cholesterol concentration at 8 wk of age and were fed for 15 wk (2.7 kg/d) one of two diets (16.5% fat and 1,156 mg of cholesterolkg diet, HD; or 3.1% fat and 0 cholesterol diet, LD) in a 2 x 2 factorial arrangement. Plasma total cholesterol ( P < .O 1) and HDL- cholesterol ( P < .O 1) concentrations were higher in boars fed HS (P < .01) and in HG boars (P < .01). There was a trend toward a diet x genotype interac- tion for plasma HDL-cholesterol ( P < .06). Plasma insulin concentration tended to be lower in boars fed HD (P < .09) or HG boars (P < .lo). There was a diet x genotype interaction for plasma glucagon ( P < .04) concentration and a trend toward an interaction for insulin (P < .07). After 15 wk, all boars were killed by electrocution and exsanguination and measurements were taken. Backfat thickness was greater ( P < .01) and carcass length ( P < .Ol) and weights of the four lean cuts (P < .02) were lower in LG than in HG boars. No microscopic atherosclerotic plaques were observed in aorta or coronary arteries. Cholesterol concentration in subcutaneous fat was lower (P < .04) in LG boars, suggesting that cholesterol content of depot fat can be reduced by genetic selection in swine.
- Published
- 1995
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Animal Welfare in Animal Agriculture : Husbandry, Stewardship, and Sustainability in Animal Production
- Author
-
Wilson G. Pond, Fuller W. Bazer, Bernard E. Rollin, Wilson G. Pond, Fuller W. Bazer, and Bernard E. Rollin
- Subjects
- Animal welfare, Livestock--Social aspects, Animal industry--Moral and ethical aspects
- Abstract
What constitutes animal welfare? With animals being used for companionship, service, research, food, fiber, and by-products, animal welfare is a topic of great interest and importance to society. As the world's population continues to increase, a major challenge for society is the maintenance of a strong and viable food system, which is linked to t
- Published
- 2011
14. Encyclopedia of Animal Science - (Two-Volume Set)
- Author
-
Wilson G. Pond, Duane E. Ullrey, Charlotte Kirk Baer, Wilson G. Pond, Duane E. Ullrey, and Charlotte Kirk Baer
- Subjects
- Animal industry--Encyclopedias, Livestock--Encyclopedias
- Abstract
PRINT/ONLINE PRICING OPTIONS AVAILABLE UPON REQUEST AT e-reference@taylorandfrancis.com
- Published
- 2011
15. Decreased high density lipoprotein cholesterol and apoprotein A-I in plasma and ultrastructural pathology in cardiac muscle of young pigs fed a diet high in zinc
- Author
-
Denis M. Medeiros, Wilson G. Pond, and Leslie M. Klevay
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,Cholesterol ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Cardiac muscle ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Lipid metabolism ,Zinc ,Biology ,medicine.disease ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,High-density lipoprotein ,chemistry ,Internal medicine ,Lactation ,medicine ,sense organs ,Copper deficiency ,Dyslipidemia - Abstract
People who supplement their diets with extra zinc usually have potentially harmful changes in lipoprotein metabolism. Because zinc can interfere with copper metabolism and copper deficiency has produced similar changes in lipid metabolism in animals and people, the hypothesis that lipid alterations from high zinc intakes are accompanied by changes in copper metabolism was tested. Progenies of swine fed a high zinc (5000 mg/kg diet) or normal zinc (150 mg/kg diet) diet during pregnancy and lactation were weaned to practical diets of natural products containing similar amounts of zinc. Concentrations of apoprotein A-I (p
- Published
- 1994
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Concentrations of inorganic elements in milk of sows selected for high and low serum cholesterol3
- Author
-
Lawrence D. Young, Young W. Park, Wilson G. Pond, Koo B. Chin, and Milton M. Kandeh
- Subjects
Cholesterol ,Trace mineral ,Soybean meal ,food and beverages ,Large white ,General Medicine ,Biology ,Crossbreed ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,fluids and secretions ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,Lactation ,Genetics ,medicine ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Composition (visual arts) ,Food science ,Serum cholesterol ,Food Science - Abstract
Comprehensive information on the composition of the whole spectrum of essential inorganic elements in sow milk is very limited. The objectives of this study were to measure concentrations of major and trace mineral elements in milk of third-generation sows selected for high (H) or low (L) serum cholesterol concentrations at 8 wk of age and to determine correlations between concentrations of milk cholesterol and major and trace mineral elements in sow milk. Twenty-one H and 21 L and 8 contemporary unselected control (U) Chester White x Landrace x Large White x Yorkshire crossbred sows were milked on d 20 or 21 of their first lactation. A standard corn and soybean meal-based diet was fed to all sows during pregnancy and lactation. There were no differences among the sow groups in milk concentrations of Ca, K, Mg, Na, and P, indicating that the genetic selection for serum cholesterol did not affect major mineral contents of the milk. Concentration of S in milk of the H sows was significantly (P < .05) higher than that of the U sows. Effects of genetic group were significant for concentrations of B, Al, Cu, and Mn in the milk, but not for Mo and Zn concentrations. Milk cholesterol concentration was negatively correlated with milk Al (P < .05), B (P < .01), and Mn (P < .05) for pooled data; there was no relationship between milk cholesterol concentration and that of other mineral elements.
- Published
- 1994
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Welfare, Health, and Biological Efficiency of Animals through Genetics and Biotechnology
- Author
-
Bernard E. Rollin, Fuller W. Bazer, and Wilson G. Pond
- Subjects
Biological efficiency ,Natural resource economics ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Biology ,Welfare ,media_common - Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Defining Agricultural Animal Welfare : Varying Viewpoints and Approaches
- Author
-
Bernard E. Rollin, Fuller W. Bazer, and Wilson G. Pond
- Subjects
Animal Welfare (journal) ,Public economics ,Agriculture ,business.industry ,Economics ,Viewpoints ,business - Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Animal Welfare in Animal Agriculture
- Author
-
Fuller W. Bazer, Wilson G. Pond, and Bernard E. Rollin
- Subjects
Service (business) ,education.field_of_study ,Natural resource economics ,Animal welfare ,Population ,Sustainability ,Food systems ,Animal agriculture ,Business ,Stewardship ,Animal husbandry ,education - Abstract
What constitutes animal welfare? With animals being used for companionship, service, research, food, fiber, and by-products, animal welfare is a topic of great interest and importance to society. As the world's population continues to increase, a major challenge for society is the maintenance of a strong and viable food system, which is linked to t
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Contemporary Animal Agriculture: Rural Community Concerns in the United States
- Author
-
Fuller W. Bazer, Wilson G. Pond, and Bernard E. Rollin
- Subjects
Geography ,Rural community ,Animal agriculture ,Socioeconomics - Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Implementing Effective Practices and Programs to Assess Animal Welfare
- Author
-
Fuller W. Bazer, Wilson G. Pond, and Bernard E. Rollin
- Subjects
Public economics ,Animal Welfare (journal) ,Business - Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Crop Residues and Other Feed Resources: Inedible for Humans but Valuable for Animals
- Author
-
Fuller W. Bazer, Wilson G. Pond, and Bernard E. Rollin
- Subjects
Crop residue ,Agronomy ,Environmental science - Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Food Safety Issues in Animal Source Foods Related to Animal Health and Welfare
- Author
-
Fuller W. Bazer, Wilson G. Pond, and Bernard E. Rollin
- Subjects
Animal health ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Environmental health ,Animal source foods ,Business ,Food safety ,Welfare ,media_common - Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Perspectives on Emergence of Contemporary Animal Agriculture in the Mid-twentieth Century : The Decline of Husbandry and the Rise of the Industrial Model
- Author
-
Fuller W. Bazer, Wilson G. Pond, and Bernard E. Rollin
- Subjects
Political science ,Economic history ,Animal agriculture ,Animal husbandry - Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Animal Welfare in the Context of Ecological Sustainability
- Author
-
Bernard E. Rollin, Wilson G. Pond, and Fuller W. Bazer
- Subjects
Animal Welfare (journal) ,Natural resource economics ,Sustainability ,Economics ,Context (language use) - Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. The Opinions and Recommendations of One Particular Study Group: The Pew Commission on Industrial Farm Animal Production
- Author
-
Bernard E. Rollin, Wilson G. Pond, and Fuller W. Bazer
- Subjects
Group (periodic table) ,Animal production ,Business ,Commission ,Public administration - Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Contributions of Farm and Laboratory Animals to Society
- Author
-
Wilson G. Pond, Bernard E. Rollin, and Fuller W. Bazer
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Symbiosis of Plants, Animals, and Microbes
- Author
-
Bernard E. Rollin, Fuller W. Bazer, and Wilson G. Pond
- Subjects
Symbiosis ,Botany ,Biology - Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Competition between Animals and Humans for Cultivated Crops: Livestock Production and Our Food Supply
- Author
-
Fuller W. Bazer, Wilson G. Pond, and Bernard E. Rollin
- Subjects
Agricultural science ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Food supply ,Production (economics) ,Livestock ,Business ,Competition (biology) ,media_common - Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Encyclopedia of Animal Science, Second Edition
- Author
-
Duane E. Ullrey, Wilson G. Pond, and Charlotte Kirk Baer
- Subjects
Philosophy ,Encyclopedia ,Classics - Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Reproductive, endocrine, and organ weight differences of swine selected for high or low serum cholesterol2
- Author
-
Wilson G. Pond, L. D. Young, and T. Wise
- Subjects
Litter (animal) ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Offspring ,Cholesterol ,media_common.quotation_subject ,General Medicine ,Biology ,Fecundity ,medicine.disease ,High cholesterol ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Animal science ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Control line ,Internal medicine ,Genetics ,medicine ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Ovulation ,Testosterone ,Food Science ,media_common - Abstract
Three generations of selection for 56-d blood cholesterol concentrations were used to establish low and high cholesterol lines of pigs in which cholesterol concentrations differed by 39% in the last generation. Litter size (number of fully formed pigs born per litter) diverged with each successive generation of selection and, at the third generation, litter size differed between the low and high line by two pigs (high line = 8.5 +/- .6; low line = 10.5 +/- .5; P < .05). A random selection of offspring (gilts, n = 109; boars, n = 46; barrows, n = 94) from the third generation and a control line maintained throughout the experiment were monitored for hormonal and anatomical relationships that might provide insight into the mechanisms that altered fecundity. Ovulation rate (number of corpora lutea) as determined on d 60 of pregnancy was increased in the low (n = 29) compared with the high cholesterol line (n = 38; 11.8 +/- .3 vs 9.8 +/- .3, respectively; P < .05), and litter size continued to be increased in the low cholesterol line (P < .05). No differences were noted between lines in kidney, ovarian, or total corpora lutea weight. Empty uterine weight and adrenal weight were increased in the high cholesterol line (P < .05) in randomly selected offspring of the third generation, and liver weight increased in the low line (P < .05). Associated with increased concentrations of cholesterol were increased serum concentrations of progesterone (gilts) and testosterone (boars) in the high cholesterol line (P < .05).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
- Published
- 1993
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Body weight gain is correlated with serum cholesterol at 8 weeks of age in pigs selected for four generations for low or high serum cholesterol2
- Author
-
David L. Hachey, Harry J. Mersmann, Peter D. Klein, Shide Zhang, Wilson G. Pond, Patricia A. Schoknecht, Laura Ferlic, and William W. Wong
- Subjects
Cholesterol ,Birth weight ,High serum ,General Medicine ,Biology ,Body weight ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Animal science ,chemistry ,Genetics ,medicine ,Fourth generation ,Weaning ,Animal Science and Zoology ,medicine.symptom ,Weight gain ,Serum cholesterol ,Food Science - Abstract
We determined the relationship of BW at birth, weaning (4 wk of age), and 8 wk of age to serum total cholesterol (C), high-density lipoprotein-cholesterol (HDL-C), and triglycerides (TG) at 8 wk of age in pigs, from the fourth generation that had been selected for low (10 litters, 75 pigs, LC) or high (10 litters, 63 pigs, HC) C at 8 wk of age. Mean C concentration at 8 wk of age was 81 +/- 30 mg/dL for LC groups and 136 +/- 19 mg/dL for HC groups. Serum C, HDL-C, and TG concentrations were not correlated with birth weight, suggesting that the physiological factors that may cause reduced weight gain in older animals are not operative in newborn pigs. All three constituents were correlated (P < .05) with BW at weaning and at 8 wk. However, only 4% of the variation in weight at weaning and 7% at 8 wk could be explained by a relationship with serum TG. There was a positive correlation between C and BW at 8 wk (r = .46, P < .05), which was apparent within the subgroups of LC and HC females and LC males (r = .46, .48, .68, respectively); the correlation was low (r = .26) in HC males.
- Published
- 1993
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Effects of carbadox, copper, or Yucca shidigera extract on growth performance and visceral weight of young pigs1
- Author
-
J. T. Yen and Wilson G. Pond
- Subjects
Meal ,biology ,Chemistry ,Animal feed ,Yucca ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Weanling ,General Medicine ,YUCCA EXTRACT ,biology.organism_classification ,Copper ,Crossbreed ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Animal science ,Botany ,Genetics ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Carbadox ,Food Science - Abstract
Two identical trials, each with 128 crossbred weanling barrows (6.8 +/- .2 and 7.6 +/- .2 kg for Trials 1 and 2, respectively), were conducted. In each trial, pigs were allowed to consume ad libitum a 16% CP corn-soybean meal basal diet (B), B + 55 ppm of carbadox, B + 250 ppm of copper (Cu), or B + 125 ppm of Yucca shidigera extract for 56 d (four pens/diet; eight pigs/pen). At d 56 of the test, eight pigs/diet (two pigs/pen) were slaughtered for carcass and viscera measurements. Data of carbadox treatment in Trial 1 are excluded from this paper because of an error in mixing of the diet. In Trial 1, during the test period from d 0 to 28, pigs fed Cu had greater (P .05) compared with those fed B. During the period from 29 to 56 d, ADG was similar among pigs fed different diets (P > .05) but ADFI was affected (P Cu > B). No differences (P > .05) among diets were detected for gain/feed (G/F) and visceral weights expressed as a percentage of slaughter BW. In Trial 2, during the first 28 d, the ADG, ADFI, and G/F responses of pigs to Cu, yucca extract, and B were similar to those observed in Trial 1.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
- Published
- 1993
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Milk cholesterol concentration in sows selected for three generations for high or low serum cholesterol2
- Author
-
Wilson G. Pond, Young W. Park, Milton M. Kandeh, and Lawrence D. Young
- Subjects
Meal ,education.field_of_study ,Cholesterol ,Population ,food and beverages ,Lipid metabolism ,General Medicine ,Crossbreed ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Animal science ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,Lactation ,Genetics ,medicine ,Gestation ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Lactose ,education ,Food Science - Abstract
Female crossbred swine (Chester White x Landrace x Large White x Yorkshire) selected for three generations for low (L, n = 24) or high (H, n = 26) serum cholesterol at 8 wk of age were milked at d 20 or 21 of their first lactation to measure cholesterol, fat, lactose, protein, and ash concentrations. A contemporary, unselected control (C) group from the same original population (third lactation, n = 7) was sampled concurrently. All sows were fed a standard gestation, then lactation, diet that contained no cholesterol or added fat (all plant, corn-soybean meal). Genetic selection for low or high serum cholesterol at 8 wk of age induced corresponding changes in milk cholesterol and fat concentration in the third generation of selection, but not in any other milk constituents. Milk cholesterol concentrations (milligrams/100 grams fresh weight) were L, 25.3 +/- 3.0; C, 35.7 +/- 8.0; and H, 41.4 +/- 6.9 (L < C < H, P < .01). Corresponding values for milk fat were 5.7 +/- 1.3, 7.2 +/- .8, and 7.0 +/- .8 mg (L < C = H, P < .01). Serum cholesterol concentrations at 8 wk of age were L, 66.1 +/- 8.1; C, 93.7 +/- 13.7; and H, 126.2 +/- 9.7 mg/dL (P < .01). Milk cholesterol concentration was significantly correlated with serum cholesterol (r = .782, P < .01) and milk fat (r = .36, P < .01). It seems that selecting swine for low or high serum cholesterol at 8 wk of age induced changes in lipid metabolism reflected in differences in milk cholesterol concentrations.
- Published
- 1993
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Adequate Food for All
- Author
-
Dan L. Brown, Buford L. Nichols, and Wilson G. Pond
- Subjects
Food security ,History ,business.industry ,Agriculture ,Food choice ,Animal source foods ,Food processing ,Environmental ethics ,World population ,business ,Food safety ,Energy source - Abstract
Food and Agriculture in Human History Emergence and Evolution of Agriculture: The Impact on Human Health and Lifestyle Clark Spencer Larsen The Evolving Knowledge of Nutrition Buford L. Nichols and Roberto Quezada-Calvillo Foods by Choice Role of Religion, Spirituality, and Faith in Food Choices Jeffrey Stanton Kellam The Influence of Culture and Customs on Food Choices Cindy M. Imai, Dustin J. Burnett, and Johanna T. Dwyer The Required Nutrients Digestion and Absorption of Carbohydrates Roberto Quezada-Calvillo and Buford L. Nichols Lipids Duane E. Ullrey Protein and Amino Acids Duane E. Ullrey Vitamins and Mineral Elements Duane E. Ullrey Foods and Health Overweight, Obesity, and Related Diseases Gail G. Harrison and Summer Hamide Diseases of Nutrient Deficiencies Barbara Elaine Golden Effects of Growth Retardation and Nutrient Deficiencies on Cognitive Function and Behavior in Infants and Children Susan P. Walker and Julie M. Meeks Gardner Animal Source Foods: Effects on Nutrition and Function in Children in Developing Countries Monika Grillenberger Functional Foods John W. Finley Global Food Safety Issues Mindy Brashears and Tyler Stephens Food Production: Synergy of Science, Technology, and Human Ingenuity Challenge and Threats to Sustainable Food Production Larry W. Harrington and Peter R. Hobbs Global Climate Change and Agriculture Roberto Cesar Izaurralde Bioenergy: Energy Sources and Costs for Agriculture Donald C. Erbach and Wallace W. Wilhelm Soil Science: Management and Conservation R. Lal Advances in Water Science, Management, and Conservation B. A. Stewart Crop Science and Production Technology Peter R. Hobbs and Larry W. Harrington Animal Science and Production Technology G. Eric Bradford, Wilson G. Pond, and Kevin R. Pond Global Food Security World Population and Food Availability Shahla Shapouri and Stacey Rosen Changing Food Supply, Demand, and Marketing Issues: What Affects Price and Affordability? Miguel I. Gomez, Charles F. Nicholson, and Paul E. McNamara Food Availability and Quality: Situations and Opportunities in Developing Countries Dan L. Brown
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Potential contribution of absorbed volatile fatty acids to whole-animal energy requirement in conscious swine1
- Author
-
D. A. Hill, John A. Nienaber, J. T. Yen, and Wilson G. Pond
- Subjects
Absorption (pharmacology) ,Meal ,genetic structures ,digestive, oral, and skin physiology ,General Medicine ,Biology ,Energy requirement ,Ileal Vein ,Animal science ,Postprandial ,Biochemistry ,Genetics ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Heat of combustion ,Hepatic portal vein ,Gas chromatography ,Food Science - Abstract
Chronic cannulas were placed in the hepatic portal vein, ileal vein, and carotid artery in seven crossbred growing gilts trained to consume once daily 1.2 kg of a 16% CP corn-soybean meal diet. Eleven days after surgery, each pig (37.4 kg BW) was placed in an open-circuit calorimeter and its cannulas were connected to a system for determining portal absorption of nutrients. The whole-animal heat production and net portal absorption of gut VFA were measured simultaneously for 12 h after the pig was fed 1.2 kg of feed. Plasma concentrations of VFA, including acetic, propionic, isobutyric, butyric, isovaleric, and valeric acids, in portal and arterial samples were determined by gas chromatography after a cleanup by ion-exchange chromatography. The net portal absorption of VFA was calculated by multiplying the porto-arterial plasma concentration difference of the VFA by portal vein plasma flow. Plasma flow was estimated by the indicator-dilution technique using p-aminohippuric acid as the indicator. The energy value of absorbed VFA was the sum of products of each individual VFA multiplied by its corresponding value of the heat of combustion. The mean hourly energy value of absorbed VFA during the 12-h postprandial period was .65 +/- .03 kcal.h-1.kg BW-1. The mean hourly whole-animal heat production was 2.70 +/- .04 kcal.h-1.kg BW-1. Thus, in our 37.4-kg pigs, which were trained to consume 1.2 kg of a 16% CP corn-soybean meal diet once daily, the gut VFA absorbed into the portal vein could contribute 23.8 +/- 1.1% to whole-animal heat production if all of the absorbed VFA were combusted to CO2.
- Published
- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Subsequent response to early diet cholesterol and feed restriction in swine
- Author
-
Wilson G. Pond and Harry J. Mersmann
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,Cholesterol ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Large white ,Artificial rearing ,Biology ,medicine.disease ,High cholesterol ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Liver cholesterol ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Internal medicine ,Total cholesterol ,medicine ,Low cholesterol ,Restricted diet - Abstract
Three four-way cross (Chester White × Landrace × Large White × Yorkshire) female pigs from each of twelve litters were used. One pig from each trio remained with its primiparous dam and its other littermates to age 28 d. Two pigs from each trio were removed to individual boxes at age 24 to 36 h and fed liquid sow-milk substitute containing low cholesterol (14 mg/100 g) or high cholesterol (151 mg/100 g) to age 28 d. All pigs were weaned to a dry diet containing 182 mg cholesterol/100 g to age 12 wk and 115 mg cholesterol/100 g from age 12 wk to 20 wk. Carcass measurements and organ weights were recorded at slaughter (20 wk) and liver was analyzed for cholesterol. Body weights were recorded weekly to 28 d and bi-weekly thereafter; serum total cholesterol was determined on d 1, 28, 56, 84, 112 and 136. Sow-reared (SR) pigs were heavier (P
- Published
- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Fetal Organ Response to Maternal Protein Deprivation During Pregnancy in Swine
- Author
-
J. Klindt, Ralph R. Maurer, and Wilson G. Pond
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Swine ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Hematocrit ,Biology ,Embryonic and Fetal Development ,Random Allocation ,Pregnancy ,Suidae ,Protein Deficiency ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Analysis of Variance ,Fetus ,Gastrointestinal tract ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Body Weight ,Proteins ,Fetal Body Weight ,DNA ,Organ Size ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Blood proteins ,Endocrinology ,Pregnancy, Animal ,RNA ,Gestation ,Female - Abstract
To test the hypothesis that maternal protein deprivation in early pregnancy retards body and organ growth of 63-d (midterm) pig fetuses, 16 primiparous domestic four-way crossbred swine were fed a diet adequate in protein (13% protein) (A) or a protein-restricted (0.7% protein) diet (PR) from d 1 to 63 of pregnancy or to parturition. Maternal body weight, plasma protein, hematocrit, and heart and spleen weights were reduced, and indices of body fatness were increased by the PR diet. Fetal body weights were reduced and fetal placental weights were increased at d 63 by protein restriction. Length from crown to rump and weights of liver, kidney, gastrointestinal tract, and cerebrum were lower in PR than in A fetuses. Concentrations of protein, RNA and DNA in liver, cerebrum and longissimus muscle were unaffected by maternal diet, but total amounts of all three constituents in liver and cerebrum were lower in PR than in A. Relative organ weights were similar in A and PR fetuses except that kidneys and gastrointestinal tract were greater in A fetuses. Newborn body weights and absolute organ weights were generally lower in PR than in A, but relative weights were similar. The observed reduction in body and organ weights and amounts of protein, RNA and DNA in 63-d fetuses and newborn progeny of PR swine establishes that the stunting effect of maternal protein restriction can be initiated by midterm, preceding the period of most rapid accretion of body tissues during prenatal life in the pig.
- Published
- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Dietary supplementation with cholesterol (Chol) and docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) alters the profiles of amino acids in tissues of neonatal pigs
- Author
-
Sung Woo Kim, Peng Li, Guoyao Wu, Sujay Datta, and Wilson G. Pond
- Subjects
chemistry.chemical_classification ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cholesterol ,Biochemistry ,Amino acid ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Docosahexaenoic acid ,Internal medicine ,Genetics ,medicine ,Dietary supplementation ,Molecular Biology ,Biotechnology - Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Effect of carbadox on net absorption of ammonia and glucose into hepatic portal vein of growing pigs1
- Author
-
J. T. Yen and Wilson G. Pond
- Subjects
Meal ,medicine.medical_specialty ,General Medicine ,Absorption (skin) ,Biology ,Ileal Vein ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Ammonia ,Postprandial ,Endocrinology ,Basal (medicine) ,chemistry ,Internal medicine ,Genetics ,medicine ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Hepatic portal vein ,Carbadox ,Food Science - Abstract
Chronic cannulas were placed into the hepatic portal vein, ileal vein and carotid artery of growing pigs trained to consume their daily allowance of 1.2 kg of feed (16% protein corn-soybean meal basal diet) in a single meal. The average preoperative BW of pigs was 44.7 kg for Trial 1 (three pigs) and 35.3 kg for Trial 2 (seven pigs). In Trial 1, net absorption of ammonia (NH3) and glucose into the portal vein was determined three times at weekly intervals. The net portal absorptions were derived by multiplying the porto-arterial plasma concentration difference of NH3 and glucose by portal vein plasma flow rate estimated with the p-aminohippuric acid indicator-dilution technique. Differences in the net portal absorptions of NH3 and glucose among the three weekly measurements were small (P greater than .05). In Trial 2, the first sequence of net portal absorption measurements was conducted when pigs were fed the basal diet, and the second sequence of measurements was conducted after the pigs had been fed the diet supplemented with 55 ppm of carbadox for 7 d. Carbadox supplementation reduced (P less than .05) plasma NH3 concentration in portal plasma during the 2.5-h to 5-h postprandial period and decreased (P less than .05) net portal absorption of NH3 during the 2.5-h to 4-h postprandial period. Carbadox, however, did not affect (P greater than .05) net portal absorption of glucose. We suggest that carbadox suppresses the production of cell-toxic NH3 by intestinal microorganisms and, thus, reduces the injury and turnover of intestinal cells.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
- Published
- 1990
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Organ Hypertrophy and Responses of Colon Microbial Populations of Growing Swine to High Dietary Protein
- Author
-
Friday O. I. Anugwa, Wilson G. Pond, Gary S. Ross, V. H. Varel, and James S. Dickson
- Subjects
Male ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,Colon ,Swine ,Stomach ,Campylobacter ,Body Weight ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Physiology ,Hypertrophy ,Organ Size ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Small intestine ,Muscle hypertrophy ,Microbiology ,Adipose capsule of kidney ,Cecum ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Campylobacter Infections ,medicine ,Animals ,Large intestine ,Dietary Proteins ,Feces - Abstract
Thirty-two castrated male crossbred growing pigs (average initial wt 26.9 kg) were used to determine the effect of a high level of dietary protein (37%) compared with a normal level of protein (15%) on enterobacteria and Campylobacter sp. inhabitation in the large intestine and on visceral organ hypertrophy and the interrelationships between these two factors. Pigs were kept in pairs (eight pens of two pigs/diet) and fed their respective diets and libitum. Eight pigs (two pens of two pigs fed each diet) were killed at wk 4, 8, 12 and 16 without fasting. Fecal samples were obtained every 2 wk from animals scheduled for necropsy at 16 wk, and colon contents were obtained from all pigs at necropsy; samples were enumerated individually for enterobacteria and Campylobacter sp. Weights of heart, lungs, liver, kidneys, perirenal fat and empty stomach, small intestine and large intestine were recorded at necropsy. Stomach, cecum and proximal colon were sectioned for histopathologic examination. Daily body weight gain was depressed by high dietary protein, but liver and kidneys were heavier in the high protein group than in controls at each time interval. Mild lymphoid hyperplasia of Peyer's patches in the small intestine in some pigs in both groups was indicative of antigenic stimulation but not of pathologic significance. There was no effect of diet on counts of enterobacteria or Campylobacter sp. in feces or colon contents during the 16-wk experiment. We conclude that the hypertrophic response of the tissues of growing pigs to high dietary protein is not the result of the presence of Campylobacter sp. or enterobacteria in the colon contents.
- Published
- 1990
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Encyclopedia of Animal Science
- Author
-
Duane E. Ullrey, Charlotte Kirk Baer, and Wilson G. Pond
- Subjects
Animal Welfare (journal) ,Encyclopedia ,Zoology ,Engineering ethics ,Animal behavior ,Bioethics ,Biology ,Meat science - Abstract
"Written and edited by a distinguished team of experts, this encyclopedia encompasses animal physiology; animal growth and development; animal behavior; animal reproduction and breeding; alternative approaches to animal maintenance; meat science and muscle biology; farmed animal welfare and bioethics; and food safety. Organized with reader-friendly descriptions of technologies, the second edition consists of more than 300 entries--many of which are new--ranging from adaptation and stress, to zoos and aquariums. With 2500 references and hundreds of figures, equations, and tables, it covers new developments in genomics, transgenesis, cloning, and mathematical model constructions"
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Adequate Food for All : Culture, Science, and Technology of Food in the 21st Century
- Author
-
Wilson G. Pond, Buford L. Nichols, Dan L. Brown, Wilson G. Pond, Buford L. Nichols, and Dan L. Brown
- Subjects
- HD9000.5
- Abstract
Food is the sustenance of life. But while we understand that a secure supply of food has been affected by many factors over the course of history, we do not often allow ourselves to entertain the idea that a lack of adequate food worldwide is a very real and dangerous possibility. While soil degradation, water distribution, climate change, populati
- Published
- 2009
44. Dietary intrinsic phytate protects colon from lipid peroxidation in pigs with a moderately high dietary iron intake
- Author
-
Yang Xin Fu, Chad H. Stahl, Xin Gen Lei, Wen-Hsing Cheng, K. R. Roneker, Wilson G. Pond, and Jesús M. Porres
- Subjects
Male ,Phytic Acid ,Thiobarbituric acid ,Colon ,Swine ,Weanling ,medicine.disease_cause ,Thiobarbituric Acid Reactive Substances ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Antioxidants ,Ferrous ,Lipid peroxidation ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,medicine ,TBARS ,Animals ,Food science ,Intestinal Mucosa ,biology ,Chemistry ,Diet ,Oxidative Stress ,Liver ,Catalase ,biology.protein ,Phytase ,Female ,Lipid Peroxidation ,Oxidative stress ,Iron, Dietary - Abstract
High iron consumption has been proposed to relate to an increase in the risk of colon cancer, whereas high levels of supplemental sodium phytate effectively reduce iron-induced oxidative injury and reverse iron-dependent augmentation of colorectal tumorigenesis. However, the protective role of intrinsic dietary phytate has not been determined. In this study, we examined the impact of removing phytate present in a corn-soy diet by supplemental microbial phytase on susceptibility of pigs to the oxidative stress caused by a moderately high dietary iron intake. Thirty-two weanling pigs were fed the corn-soy diets containing two levels of iron (as ferrous sulfate, 80 or 750 mg/kg diet) and microbial phytase (as Natuphos, BASF, Mt. Olive, NJ, 0 or 1200 units/kg). Pigs fed the phytase-supplemented diets did not receive any inorganic phosphorus to ensure adequate degradation of phytate. After 4 months of feeding, liver, colon, and colon mucosal scrapings were collected from four pigs in each of the four dietary groups. Colonic lipid peroxidation, measured as thiobarbituric acid reacting substances (TBARS), was increased by both the high iron (P< 0.0008) and phytase (P< 0.04) supplementation. Both TBARS and F2-isoprostanes, an in vivo marker of lipid peroxidation, in colonic mucosa were affected by dietary levels of iron (P< 0.03). Mean hepatic TBARS in pigs fed the phytase-supplemented, high iron diet was 43%-65% higher than that of other groups although the differences were nonsignificant. Moderately high dietary iron induced hepatic glutathione peroxidase activity (P= 0.06) and protein expression, but decreased catalase (P< 0.05) in the colonic mucosa. In conclusion, intrinsic phytate in corn and soy was protective against lipid peroxidation in the colon associated with a moderately high level of dietary iron.
- Published
- 1999
45. Pork as Human Food
- Author
-
Wilson G. Pond, Dewey L. Harris, and Jerome H. Maner
- Subjects
Human food ,Nutrient ,Cooking methods ,technology, industry, and agriculture ,food and beverages ,Business ,Food science ,Peanut meal - Abstract
Pork, along with other animal products, provides protein of higher nutritive value than that present in most plant proteins and also provides other nutrients not found in adequate amounts in plants. Pork supplies nearly one-half of the meat production from domestic animals in the world and about 40% of the meat (excluding poultry) in the United States. The long-term acceptance of pork as a major food source has been a result of its high nutritive value as well as the variety of processing and cooking methods available for its inclusion in many cultures. Those associated with the swine industry must not lose sight of the fact that the consumer ultimately determines the amount and kind of pork produced. The purpose of this chapter is to characterize pork as to its nutrient composition and other properties that affect its acceptability to humans.
- Published
- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Pork Production Systems
- Author
-
Wilson G. Pond, Jerome H. Maner, and D. L. Harris
- Subjects
Production (economics) ,Biology ,Pulp and paper industry - Published
- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Of Pigs and People
- Author
-
Wilson G. Pond and Xin Gen Lei
- Subjects
Biology - Published
- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Genetics and Breeding Systems
- Author
-
Dewey L. Harris, Jerome H. Maner, and Wilson G. Pond
- Subjects
Breeder (cellular automaton) ,Molecular breeding ,Animal breeding ,business.industry ,Artificial insemination ,medicine.medical_treatment ,medicine ,Biology ,business ,Selective breeding ,Biotechnology ,Production system - Abstract
In Chapter 3, it was stated that the genetic aspects of the production system set both the limits and potential for performance of the system. The breeding stock input into the system introduces potentials for animal performance but these are not usually exceeded (experimental lean growth promotants such as ractopamine and somatotropins do increase lean growth potential above that expressed without their use). In this chapter, we will examine alternative breeding systems to provide that input, tools available to the breeder and producer to improve the potential for that input, and the evolution of genetic improvement tools from the traditional showring-based visual appraisal approach to modern computer-based performance testing and genetic evaluation procedures.
- Published
- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. The Pig: Past, Present, and Future
- Author
-
Dewey L. Harris, Wilson G. Pond, and Jerome H. Maner
- Subjects
Human food ,History ,Ethnology ,Consumption (sociology) ,Domestication - Abstract
The evolution and domestication of the pig has been described in several books (Towne and Wentworth 1950; Mellen 1952; Briggs 1969; Mason 1969), and the student interested in a detailed account of this fascinating story is referred to them. Recorded domestication appears in Biblical accounts as early as 2000 B.C. Despite some ancient cultural and religious taboos forbidding the consumption of pork, the domestication of the pig as a source of human food has persisted, and the continued increases in numbers of swine throughout the world up to the present time provide evidence of the contribution of the pig to human nutrition through the ages.
- Published
- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Prenatal Development
- Author
-
Wilson G. Pond, Jerome H. Maner, and Dewey L. Harris
- Published
- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.