By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Better eggs mean better broilers, a fact that
prompted one Mississippi State University researcher to look
at what a hen must eat to lay these good eggs. Mississippi's
$1.5 billion poultry industry is the state's largest
agricultural commodity. When even a small improvement is
made in this business, the result is seen in millions of
dollars. David
Peebles, poultry science researcher with the Mississippi
Agricultural and Forestry Experiment Station, recently
completed studies of how different breeder hen diets affect
the eggs they lay and ultimately the broilers that
hatch. "The
research deals mostly with the fat we add to poultry diets,"
Peebles said. "We fed corn oil, poultry fat and lard to
these hens in different concentrations. We looked at its
effect on the egg and followed that through to the
broiler." Fat
added in breeder diets is used to increase their level of
energy. The MAFES research found that the level and type of
fat in the diet have separate, recognizable
effects. "The
work that has been done up until now hasn't really separated
out the effects of the types and amounts of dietary fat,"
Peebles said. "Previous research looked at overall effects,
but we identified their individual effects." Peebles
researched how the hen's diet affected egg quality, the
newly hatched chick's health and viability and the
ready-for- slaughter broiler. "Hens
fed a higher percentage of fat and higher added levels of
saturated fats laid eggs with thicker shells that allowed
less movement of gas through the shell than those hens fed
diets with lower levels of added fat and higher amounts of
unsaturated fat," Peebles said. The
research noted that lower amounts of dietary fat with lower
saturation allowed the egg to better sustain the growing
chick. Thicker shells, the result of high fat diets, make
the eggs less hatchable. "You
want to have a shell that is sufficiently strong but allows
a sufficient exchange of gas," Peebles said. Peebles
also noted that hens fed higher fat diets actually produced
fewer eggs. Attention
then turned to the contents of the egg as researchers looked
at the yolk, albumen and weight. "High
dietary energy decreased the percentage of albumen in the
egg without significantly altering its ratio to yolk,"
Peebles said. "When you start altering egg components,
you're affecting the nutritional status of the developing
chick." Peebles
also studied the developing embryo from the perspective of
composition, and body, organ and yolk sac weights and found
no difference that could be traced to breeder hen diets. The
next significant difference he found was in the growing
broiler after hatching. "The
rate of growth in the first 21-days was faster in those
broilers that hatched from eggs laid by the hens fed corn
oil, the lower-saturated fat," Peebles said. "This is
surprising because we didn't see any immediate effects in
the embryo, but we do see effects after they
hatch." The
downside, however, is that the broilers had a poorer feed
conversion ratio from 22 to 42 days old. This ratio compares
the amount of feed taken in to the weight gained. The
final study looked at the broilers' weight at slaughter.
Again, the less saturated fat from corn oil out-performed
the lard. The
overall conclusion was that corn oil in breeder hen diets at
an additional level of 1.5 percent is useful in producing
quality eggs and broilers which gain weight
better. Results
of this study are being published in May, and Peebles
anticipates they will be immediately useful to the poultry
industry. "I think
the nutritionists that formulate diets for companies will
start looking in a little more detail at the types and
levels of fats they use as energy sources in their poultry
diets," Peebles said. "They'll be better able to tailor
diets for the specific needs of flocks." Released:
May 1, 2000
Mississippi
Agricultural News:
Poultry Research
Traces Broiler Health To Hen Diets
Contact: Dr. David Peebles, (662) 325-3379
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:25:34
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/agnews/an00/000501dp.htm
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