By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Feeding unfit food to broilers can cost a major
poultry operation $90,000 a week, but a test has been
developed to ensure quality products are fed to these
birds. Researchers
at Mississippi State University's College of Veterinary
Medicine developed a way to test fish and poultry
by-products that are fed to broilers. The test detects
biogenic amines, or toxins, produced when by-products
deteriorate. Certain
bacteria in stored raw meat by-products change amino acids
into toxins, such as histamines. These toxins can cause
extensive intestinal disorders in broilers that eat the
products, said Dr. Robert Keirs, a researcher at the
veterinary college. "The
intestinal malfunctions don't kill the chicken, and they may
not even appear sick," he said. Keirs
said the problem lies in the fact that the broiler no longer
processes food efficiently. With the intestinal tract not
functioning properly, the broilers need more nutrients than
they are getting in the food. Although
the quality of the bird appears unaffected, its final weight
may be less than expected. Broilers'
diets usually are composed of 3 to 4 percent fish and
poultry by-products, with sometimes as much as 6
percent. "By-products
are fed to the broilers to supply necessary levels of
essential amino acids not readily available through other
feed materials," Keirs said. In
producing broilers, feed accounts for 70 percent of the
total cost. But if the feed quality has deteriorated, the
birds may digest inefficiently, with production costs rising
even higher. Yearly,
Mississippi produces 700 million broilers. When broilers are
not digesting food properly, producers often must feed them
up to 5 percent more than normal to meet the birds
nutritional needs. "Biogenic
amines in feed may cause serious financial losses in the
broiler industry," Keirs said. "Growers have to use
significantly more feed to produce the same
broiler." Keirs
noticed this health problem while working with the
veterinary college's avian health monitoring
program. "Broiler
complexes using high levels of fish meal would often have
birds with high levels of intestinal disturbance," Keirs
said. He then
began working on the project with Dr. Lloyd Bennett, a
chemist and MSU researcher. Together they developed a way to
test for biogenic amine levels. Today,
the veterinary college is apparently the only lab in the
United States doing commercial work that does this test. It
is one of about 15 worldwide that tests for these toxins in
by-products. At industries' request, they test by-products
and broiler feed. "We
report the findings and they either interpret the
information themselves or ask Dr. Keirs to make an
interpretation," Bennett said. Keirs
said a major insight came in 1992 when it was found that
broilers fed certain poultry by-products had severe
intestinal problems. Keirs and Bennett associated this with
inefficient handling of the by-products being used for
feed. This
finding led to widespread industry reevaluation of how fish
and poultry by-products are processed and made into
feed. "Companies
have become much more careful with how they're rendering the
by-products," Keirs said. In
addition to developing this test, the researchers
established quality baselines for poultry by-products. They
did this through a cooperative effort with five major
by-product processing centers in the United
States. Future
research will look at nutrient loss in deteriorating
by-products. Released:
March 31, 1997
Animal
Health
Researchers
Develop Feed-Quality Test
Contact: Dr. Robert Keirs, (601) 325-1297
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:30:08
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/cvm/cvm97/970331rk.htm
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