Introduction to Poultry Nutrition
| Author: |
Steve Leeson - Department
of Animal and Poultry Science/University of Guelph |
| Creation Date: |
01 June 2000 |
| Last Reviewed: |
01 June 2000 |
The science of nutrition involves providing a balance of nutrients
that best meets the animals needs for growth, maintenance, egg production,
etc. For economic reasons, this supply of nutrients should be at least
cost, and so we must supply only enough for requirements, without
there being any major excesses. It is very difficult and very expensive
to supply all nutrients at the exact nutrient needs - rather we have
to oversupply some nutrients in practical situations, in an attempt
to meet the limiting nutrients. In poultry diets these limiting nutrients
are usually energy and some of the essential amino acids, such as
methionine and lysine. In formulating diets the following nutrients
are considered:
- Energy
- Protein
- Fat
- Vitamins
- Minerals
- Water
With the exception of water, these nutrients are provided by the
ingredients that make-up the diet. Ingredients are classified as:
- Cereals
- Animal Proteins
- Vegetables Proteins
- Vegetable Fats
- Animal Fats
- Micro Minerals
- Macro Minerals
- Vitamin Premixes
Each of these separate types of ingredient provides a specific quantity
and quality of nutrients to the diet. Balancing these ingredients
to produce the diet formulation (recipe) relies on the skill of the
nutritionist.
In order to produce a diet, the nutritionist must know the birds
needs and the composition of the ingredients.
Formulation = Balance needs vs ingredients vs costs.
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The following nutrients are considered both for the birds needs and
for the composition of the various ingredients:
- Protein
Measure as crude protein, which is simply nitrogen x 6.25.
Component amino acids are the important part of protein.
There are 10 amino acids that are essential to the bird:
- Methionine
- Lysine
- Tryptophan
- Threonine
Protein and amino acids are supplied by ingredients such as:
- Soybean meal
- Canola meal
- Cottonseed meal
All contain toxins that must be destroyed by heat treatment.
Other protein sources are from animals, and are generally of better
amino acid content, but are expensive:
- Meat meal
- Poultry by-product meal
- Fish meal
- Energy
The most expensive nutrient in a diet, but is difficult to measure
and there is no guarantee with the feed.
Energy is important because it governs feed intake
high energy ---> low feed intake
low energy ---> high feed intake
Sources of energy - everything in the diet other than minerals.
Units - Calorie, or Kilocalorie
Metabolizable energy = Energy intake as feed minus energy appearing
in urine and feces. Therefore can only measure with a chicken trial,
therefore expensive ($1,000/assay).
Sources:
- Corn
- Soybean meal
- Fat
- Wheat
- Meat meal
- Barley
Fiber largely indigestible - cecal microbes?
- - Influences manure consistency.
- - Problem with some ingredients such as wheat, barley - enzymes.
- Vitamins
- All supplied as synthetics.
- Fat soluble A, D3, E, K.
- Water soluble - B vitamins eg. Riboflavin, biotin
- Cost about $2-5/tonne.
- Exception is choline, which is added separately.
- Generous safety factor 2-10x requirement.
- Storage loss -> time, temperature, humidity
-
- Minerals
- Macro --> Calcium, Phosphorus
- Micro --> Copper, Zinc, Manganese, Iron, Iodine, Selenium
- Salt --> Sodium, Chloride
- Fats
Not really an essential nutrient, other than linoleic acid (fatty
acid).
Animal fats - hard, inexpensive. Problems with digestion by young
birds.
Vegetable oils - liquid, expensive
Pellet quality, dustiness of feed
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