An assessment of the nutritive value of vegetable protein meals for growing pigs using Silcock available lysine values

1975 ◽  
Vol 15 (76) ◽  
pp. 626 ◽  
Author(s):  
MR Taverner ◽  
CJ Rayner

The effects on the growth performance of pigs and the total and Silcock available lysine content of diets were studied when an equal amount of protein from rapeseed meal and soyabean meal, either expeller or solvent extracted, was included in diets based on wheat and meat and bone meal and fed in restricted amounts to 32 pigs from 20 to 45 kg liveweight. The total and available lysine content of the proteins and diets decreased in the order: solvent extracted soyabean meal, expeller extracted soyabean meal, expeller extracted rapeseed meal, solvent extracted rapeseed meal. The growth rates and food conversion ratios of pigs varied in the same order, and average growth rate and average food conversion were significantly correlated to both total lysine (r2 = 0.910, r2 = 0.918 respectively) and available lysine (r2 = 0.998, r2 = 0.998 respectively) in the diet. The weights of the thyroid glands of pigs fed either rapeseed meal were significantly greater than those of pigs fed the soyabean meals.'Pigs fed solvent extracted soyabean meal had more lean in their hams than pigs fed other supplements.

1982 ◽  
Vol 62 (3) ◽  
pp. 915-918
Author(s):  
Y. K. GOH ◽  
A. SHIRES ◽  
A. R. ROBBLEE ◽  
D. R. CLANDININ

The effects of sparging low glucosinolate-type rapeseed meal (Canola meal) with ammonia, in the absence or presence of steam, on its amino acid composition and feeding value for chicks were studied. Sparging treatments had no effects on the amino acid contents of the meals nor were thyroid size or the growth of chicks affected adversely when the variously treated meals were included in diets for chicks at the 20% level. Sparging with steam appeared to increase the available lysine content of the meal and improve its feeding value for chicks. Key words: Canola meal, ammoniation, sinapine, nutritive value, chicks


2005 ◽  
Vol 2005 ◽  
pp. 76-76
Author(s):  
C. Rymer ◽  
D. I. Givens

Rapeseed meal (RSM) is the richest source of commercially available home grown protein in the UK, but its inclusion in livestock diets is approximately half that of soyabean meal (SBM, DEFRA, 2004). RSM has a lower protein and available lysine content than SBM but increased nutrient digestibility was observed when pigs were fed RSM supplemented with non-starch polysaccharide degrading enzymes (Hoare et al., 2003). The objective of this experiment was to determine the effect of adding different amounts of a cell wall degrading enzyme on the available amino acid content of RSM as estimated in poultry.


1998 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kirsi Partanen ◽  
Hilkka Siljander-Rasi ◽  
Timo Alaviuhkola ◽  
Nina Van Gilse van der Pals

A growth experiment was conducted using 50 pigs (25-100 kg) to evaluate the use of meat and bone meals of different ash content as a substitute for soyabean meal (SBM) for growing pigs and the potential of 1-fluoro-2,4-dinitrobenzene (FDNB) reactive lysine in diet formulation. The control diet consisted of barley and SBM. For test diets, either 33 or 67% of SBM was replaced with meat and bone meal of low (ML, 205 g ash/kg) or high (MH, 349 g ash/kg) ash content. SBM, ML33, ML67, MH33 and MH67 diets contained 7.8, 7.8, 8.2, 7.8 and 7.9 g FDNB-reactive lysine/feed unit (feed unit is equivalent to 9.3 MJ NE), respectively. For these diets, average daily live weight gains (ADG) were 859, 830, 805, 854 and 813 g/d with feed conversion ratios of 2.25, 2.40, 2.41, 2.31 and 2.44 feed units/kg, respectively. Pigs fed the SBM diet grew faster (P


1957 ◽  
Vol 49 (2) ◽  
pp. 184-199 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. A. M. Lucas ◽  
A. F. C. Calder

1. One hundred and sixty-eight pigs were used in four experiments to test the value of including antibiotics and copper sulphate, either as separate supplements or together in rations for growing pigs. Procaine penicillin was added at the rate of 5·36 mg./lb. diet and Aureomycin (in Aurofac 2 A) at 8·03mg/lb. and CuSO4. 5H2O as 0·1% of the diet.2. During the growing period in Exp. 1, pigs fed diets supplemented with copper sulphate or procaine penicillin grew 9 and 3% faster respectively than the controls. Pigs fed a diet containing both supplements grew 22% faster than the controls. During the finishing period there was an outbreak of virus pneumonia and the within-treatment variability was large. There were no significant differences between treatments during this period, although pigs fed the supplemented diets tended to grow more slowly than the controls. Over the total experimental period pigs fed the diet supplemented only with copper sulphate grow 2% faster than the controls, and those fed the diet supplemented with both procaine penicillin and copper sulphate grew 4% faster than the controls, but these small average improvements were not statistically significant. In Exp. 1 treatment differences in food conversion efficiencies paralleled those for growth rates. Killing-out percentages were higher when pigs were fed the copper-supplemented diets, and lower when procaine penicillin was fed. The area of ‘eye’ muscle was increased by adding procaine penicillin to the diet.3. During the growing period in Exp. 2, pigs fed diets supplemented with copper sulphate or with both procaine penicillin and copper sulphate grew 8 and 9% faster, respectively, than the controls. The addition of procaine penicillin had no significant effect when added as a single supplement or in conjunction with copper sulphate. During the finishing period pigs fed diets supplemented with copper sulphate, procaine penicillin, or both copper sulphate and procaine penicillin grew 5, 3 and 10% faster, respectively, than the controls, while over the total experimental period they grew 4, 0 and 9% faster, respectively.4. Some pigs fed the copper-supplemented diets during the growing period in Exp. 2 were fed diets with no copper added over the finishing period. During this latter period the pigs grew at about the same speed as the controls, and significantly more slowly than those pigs which continued to receive copper sulphate. Thus, the average growth rates over the total experimental period were significantly slower by 3–7% when copper was omitted after 100 lb. than when it was fed to the pigs throughout the entire experiment.5. In Exp. 2, as in Exp. 1, treatment differences in efficiency of food conversion paralleled those for growth rates. A higher rate of growth was always accompanied by an improvement in efficiency of food conversion, with about the same percentage difference between treatments. Indeed, changes in rate of growth were probably dependent upon changes in efficiency of food conversion, since all pigs were fed to the same scale based on live weight.6. The treatment differences in killing-out percentage and area of eye muscle observed in Exp. 1 were not confirmed in Exp. 2. There were no differences in carcass quality measurements attributable to the treatments imposed in Exp. 2.7. The livers of pigs fed diets containing copper sulphate during both the growing and finishing periods had, on average, about eighteen times the concentration of copper found in the controls. When the copper sulphate supplement was fed only during the growing period the liver copper concentrations were, on average, about four times those of the controls. However, the variation between the individual values was very large in all groups fed copper sulphate. This variation may have been caused partly by sampling errors if copper is not distributed evenly throughout the liver.


2021 ◽  
Vol 28 (1) ◽  
pp. 45-51
Author(s):  
T. F. BALOGUN ◽  
F. G. KAANKUKA ◽  
G. S. BAWA

Amino acid analysis and 2 growth studies were carried out to determine the effect of period of boiling of full-fat soyabeans on their nutritive value for weanling and growing pigs. Soyabeans were boiled in water for 15, 20, 25 or 30 minutes in Experiment 1 and 25, 30, 35 or 40 minutes in Experiment 2. Forty cross-bred (Large White x Hampshire) pigs were used in each of the experiments. Period of boiling had no effect on amino acid analysis of full-fat soyabeans. Weanling pigs had the best growth performance when soyabeans were boiled for 30 minutes ad this was not significantly different (P>0.05) from the soyabean meal control diet. Period of boiling of full-fat soyabeans did not significantly (P>0.05) affect the performance of the heavier pigs, although improvfement was observed up to 30 minutes of boiling.


1984 ◽  
Vol 38 (2) ◽  
pp. 271-276 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. C. Patterson

ABSTRACTGrowing pigs were given diets based on barley (whole or milled), which was either untreated or sprayed with an aqueous solution of sodium hydroxide (270 g sodium hydroxide per kg water) to give 33·8 g sodium hydroxide per kg dry matter. The barley grain was treated with sodium hydroxide while in the whole state. A total of 48 pigs penned individually were given the diets on a restricted scale of feeding from an initial weight of 31·6 kg until slaughter at 81·7 kg live weight. In a metabolism study, eight boars were subjected to the same experimental treatments in two identical 4 × 4 balanced change-over experiments.The diet containing untreated milled barley gave significantly faster live-weight gain and lower food conversion ratio than the other three diets (P < 0·001). Food conversion ratios were similar for untreated whole barley and sodium hydroxide-treated barley, whether this was whole or milled. Killingout proportion was similar for untreated and treated milled barley but was significantly lower when the diet contained untreated or treated whole barley.Milling significantly increased the digestibility of energy and nitrogen. Treatment with sodium hydroxide improved the digestibility of energy in the diet with whole barley but not in the diet with milled barley. With both whole and milled barley, treatment with sodium hydroxide increased the digestibility of crude fibre (P < 0·05) but with ground barley the digestibility and retention of nitrogen were reduced considerably by treatment with sodium hydroxide.It is concluded that treatment of barley with sodium hydroxide did not improve the nutritive value of either milled or whole grain, that it reduced the digestibility of nitrogen and that it severely depressed the utilization of digested energy for growth.


1986 ◽  
Vol 55 (2) ◽  
pp. 441-453 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. S. Batterham ◽  
R.E. Darnell ◽  
L. S. Herbert ◽  
E. J. Major

1. The availability of lysine for pigs, rats and chicks was determined using samples of meat and bone meal (MBM) subjected to different pressure and temperature treatments during dry-rendering processing. The relation between slope-ratio estimates and three chemical tests for estimating ‘available’ lysine was assessed.2. The availability of lysine (proportion of total) for pigs was 0.97 in the control. Pressure (275 kPa gauge, 141°, for 30 min) in the early stage of rendering reduced availability to 0.74 and, in the late stage, to 0.46. Maintaining the final temperature at 125° for 4 h had little effect (0.84) whereas a higher temperature of 150° for 4 h reduced availability to 0.38.3. Availability estimates for rats were lower than those of the pig, ranging from 0.88 in the control to 0.21 for the high-temperature treatment (150° for 4 h). The effects for temperature were similar to those for the pig, whereas the effect of pressure was equally detrimental in both the early and late stages (0.45 and 0.43 respectively).4. For chicks, availability estimates were similar to those for the pig for the control (0.93) and the two temperature treatments (0.86 and 0.31 for the 125° and 150° treatments respectively). The chick was less susceptible to the effect of pressure applied to the MBM (0.78 and 0.63 for the early-and late-stage treatments respectively).5. Values for the indirect-and direct-1-fluoro-2, 4-dinitrobenzene-(FDNB)-‘available’-lysine assays decreased from 0.86 and 0.74 to 0.57 and 0.54 for the control and 150° for 4 h treatments respectively, indicating that approximately half the reduced availability involved reactions with the ε-amino group of lysine. There was little relation between the FDNB values and lysine availability for the treatments involving changes in pressure.6. There was little or no relation between dye-binding capacity of the meals, as assessed by the Acid Orange-12 dye-binding procedure (Hurrell et al. 1979), and lysine availability for the three species.


1982 ◽  
Vol 54 (5) ◽  
pp. 313-320
Author(s):  
Maija-Liisa Salo

Three groups of 17 Yorkshire pigs, from 24 to 98 kg liveweight, were fed on three diets which differed only in the main protein sources. Diet 1 contained Span rapeseed meal (RSM) 17% and pea 5 %, diet 2 RSM 8 % and fish meal 4 %, and diet 3 (control) soybean meal (SBM) 5.5 % and fish meal 4 %. The daily rations were isoenergetic and isonitrogenous, and contained digestive crude protein (DCP), lysine and S-amino acids according to standards. The feeds were steam pelleted, and the pigs were fed using a one-diet system and restrictive feeding. The only clear difference between diets was the poorer palatability of those containing RSM, especially of diet 2. The feeding of groups 1 and 2 was therefore actually unrestrictive. The average daily intake of f.u./pig was significantly (P < 0.01) lower in group 2. Some tail biting occurred in group 2. The growth results were equal for diets 1 and 3, and nonsignificantly poorer for diet 2. The average daily gains of groups 1, 2 and 3 were 813, 788 and 820 g, and the f.u./kg gain 2.74, 2.78 and 2.74, respectively. In carcass characteristics there were no differences between diets: the side fat was 20.3, 21.3 and 20.9 mm, and the area of l. dorsi 36.7, 37.8 and 37.7cm2, respectively. No odd tastes in fat or meat were observed. The results indicate that quite a high level of Span ROM in steam pelleted diet can be fed and still produce high daily gain. The combination of RCM with other feed ingredients seems to have an extra influence on the palatability and nutritive value of the diet. Because RSM makes the diet more bulky and less palatable, the pigs can be fed ad libitum without negative effect on the carcass quality.


1991 ◽  
Vol 63 (5) ◽  
pp. 475-482
Author(s):  
Matti Näsi ◽  
Hilkka Siljander-Rasi

The nutritive value of rapeseed meals (RSM) from Brassica campestris, 0 and 00-cultivars, with medium (25—55 μg/g defatted meal) and low (0.05), although 00-RSM’s tended to have higher OM and CP digestibilities compared with 0-RSM; pooled mean values being 0.638 vs. 0.715 for OM and 0.715 vs. 0.775 for CP. RSM treated for ruminant escape protein had the same or better digestibility than untreated RSM; pooled average values being 0.669 vs. 0.680 for OM and 0.746 vs. 0.757 for CP. This observation has practical importance since the same treatments of RSM could be employed for meals to be used in diets of both ruminants and pigs. In these experiments, the protein utilization was efficient and differences between the dietary treatments were small and insignificant. Heat treatment (Opex) did not decrease protein utilization despite a small reduction in lysine content.


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