Archaeological Reconnaissance and Architectural Inventory for Selected Areas Within the Des Moines Recreational River and Greenbelt Proposed Raccoon River Regional Park, West Des Moines, Iowa. Phase 1

1993 ◽  
Author(s):  
Leah D. Rogers
Keyword(s):  
Phase 1 ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 97 (Supplement_2) ◽  
pp. 229-230
Author(s):  
Peter J Lammers ◽  
Chad A Stahl ◽  
Mark S Honeyman

Abstract A 2 × 2 × 2 factorial design was used to compare the effect of SID Lys:ME concentration (current vs. reduced), stocking density (1.30 vs. 4.05 m2/pig), and harvest month (August vs. March) on pigs raised in bedded hoop barns in Western Iowa. For each harvest month, 420 pigs produced from the mating of Duroc boars (Choice Genetics; West Des Moines, IA) to Camborough females (PIC; Hendersonville, TN) were sorted into 12 pens. Six pens were inside 3 large-scale (9.1 × 18.3 m) hoop barns and were stocked with 64 pigs/pen (32 barrows and 32 gilts; 1.30 m2/ pig). Six pens were inside 3 small-scale (6.0 × 10.8 m) hoop barns and were stocked with 6 pigs/pen (3 barrows and 3 gilts; 4.05 m2/pig). Within each stocking density, pens were randomly assigned to 1 of 2 diets which were fed in 2 phases. Corn-soybean meal diets were formulated to deliver 2.94 or 2.34 g SID Lys per Mcal ME in phase 1 (72.6–95.0 kg) and 2.34 or 1.76 g SID Lys per Mcal ME in phase 2 (> 95.0 kg). Pigs were individually weighed every 28 days and feed disappearance was recorded. When pigs in a pen averaged 129.3 kg the entire pen of pigs were harvested. A single chop (last-rib location; 2.54 cm thick) was collected from each carcass to assess pork quality. Pigs harvested in the summer grew faster, more efficiently, and with more intramuscular fat than those harvested in winter (P-value ≤ 0.05) but had lower 10th rib pH (P-value < 0.0001). Pigs allotted 4.05 m2/pig grew more efficiently but had reduced last rib pH as compared to pigs stocked at 1.30 m2/pig (P-value < 0.05). Reducing SID Lys:ME did not impact growth performance or carcass characteristics (P-value > 0.10). Lower concentrations of SID Lys:ME may be adequate for pigs housed in bedded hoop barns but further study is warranted.


2020 ◽  
Vol 98 (Supplement_3) ◽  
pp. 144-145
Author(s):  
Payton Dahmer ◽  
Annie B Lerner ◽  
Grace Luebcke ◽  
Cassandra K Jones

Abstract There is consumer and regulatory pressure to reduce the use of conventional antimicrobial feed additives in pork production. A total of 360 pigs (DNA 241×600, initially 5.4±0.07 kg BW) were used in a 35-d study evaluating the ability for specialty lipids to replace ZnO or carbadox in nursery diets. Pigs were allotted in a completely randomized design (6 pigs/pen and 10 pens/treatment) to one of six diets: 1) control; 2) control + 3,000 ppm ZnO in phase 1 and 2,000 ppm ZnO in phase 2; 3) control + 50 g/ton carbadox; 4) control + 1% C6:C8:C10 medium chain fatty acid (MCFA) blend; 5) control + 1% proprietary oil blend (Feed Energy Corp., Des Moines, IA); and 6) control + 1% monolaurate blend (FORMI GML, ADDCON GmbH, Bitterfeld-Wolfen, Germany). Treatment diets were fed in two phases (d 0 to 19) followed by a common diet (d 19 to 35). During the treatment period, pigs fed ZnO or carbadox had greater (P&lt; 0.05) ADG than pigs fed the control or proprietary oil blend, with pigs fed the MCFA or monolaurate blends being intermediate. Pigs fed diets containing ZnO had greater (P&lt; 0.05) ADFI than those fed the control, MCFA, or propriety oil blends. Pigs fed ZnO or carbadox had higher (P&lt; 0.05) blood glucose on d 19 and firmer (P&lt; 0.05) fecal scores on d 3 than pigs fed all other diets. No differences (P &gt;0.05) were observed during the common period (d 19 to 35), however sufficient early growth differences subsequently impacted overall ADG and ADFI. In summary, ZnO and carbadox are valuable additives to maximize early nursery growth, but specialty lipid products may result in similar performance while others may restrict it. Additional research is warranted to identify optimal lipid blends to effectively replace ZnO or carbadox in nursery pig diets.


2008 ◽  
Vol 2008 (11) ◽  
pp. 5279-5297
Author(s):  
Scott A. Aurit ◽  
Ron Sova ◽  
David Dechant ◽  
Royce Hammitt

2019 ◽  
Vol 97 (Supplement_2) ◽  
pp. 75-75
Author(s):  
Leigh A Ruckman ◽  
John F Patience

Abstract The objective of this experiment was to determine the effects of dietary functional proteins with or without antibiotics on the growth and health of nursery pigs. A total of 1,230 pigs weaned at 15–18 days (4.93 ± 0.02 kg BW; PIC 359 X 1050, Hendersonville, TN) were randomly assigned to 1 of 6 dietary treatments (10 pens/treatment) for a 42-d experiment. Treatments were arranged as a 2 X 3 factorial of in-feed antibiotics (no vs yes) and functional feed additive proteins [none (CON), spray-dried plasma proteins (SDPP; AP 920, APC Inc., Ankeny, IA), or dried egg protein with IgY (DEP; Globimax JS, EW Nutrition, Des Moines, IA)]. Diets were fed in 4 phases with phase 3–4 common across treatments. Proteins were fed in phases 1 (d 0–13; 3% SDPP or 0.2% DEP) and 2 (d 13–26; 2% SDPP or 0.1% DEP). Antibiotics were fed in phase 1–3 (662 mg chlortetracycline/kg, 28 mg carbadox/kg, 441 mg chlortetracycline/kg, respectively). Growth performance data were analyzed using PROC MIXED of SAS (9.4). Pen was the experimental unit; proteins and antibiotics and their interaction were considered fixed effects. In the absence of antibiotics, compared with CON, SDPP and DEP increased ADG (CON: 0.237 kg, SDPP: 0.254 kg, DEP: 0.257 kg/d; P = 0.036) and ADFI (CON: 0.360, SDPP: 0.378, DEP: 0.383 kg/d; P = 0.040). In the presence of antibiotics, SDPP increased ADG compared with DEP, but not CON, (CON: 0.258, SDPP: 0.268, DEP: 0.251 kg/d; P = 0.036) and ADFI (CON: 0.385, SDPP: 0.398, DEP: 0.381 kg/d; P = 0.040). Diet had no effect on feed efficiency (P > 0.10). SDPP and DEP decreased the number of medical treatments administered (P = 0.001). In conclusion, the functional proteins increased growth performance in the absence of antibiotics, but not when antibiotics were used. However, the functional proteins were effective in decreasing medical treatments regardless of antibiotic use.


2001 ◽  
Vol 60 (4) ◽  
pp. 215-230 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jean-Léon Beauvois

After having been told they were free to accept or refuse, pupils aged 6–7 and 10–11 (tested individually) were led to agree to taste a soup that looked disgusting (phase 1: initial counter-motivational obligation). Before tasting the soup, they had to state what they thought about it. A week later, they were asked whether they wanted to try out some new needles that had supposedly been invented to make vaccinations less painful. Agreement or refusal to try was noted, along with the size of the needle chosen in case of agreement (phase 2: act generalization). The main findings included (1) a strong dissonance reduction effect in phase 1, especially for the younger children (rationalization), (2) a generalization effect in phase 2 (foot-in-the-door effect), and (3) a facilitatory effect on generalization of internal causal explanations about the initial agreement. The results are discussed in relation to the distinction between rationalization and internalization.


2004 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carl L. Henderson
Keyword(s):  
Phase 1 ◽  

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