Abstract
1. Two experiments were conducted with young chicks to examine the efficacy of dietary supplements of amino acids, creatine and potassium acetate in the alleviation of adverse effects of auto‐claved jack beans (AJB).
2. Creatine supplementation of AJB diets markedly enhanced the efficiencies of food and nitrogen utilisation of chicks, restoring these indices to control values. The improvement in nitrogen utilisation was enhanced further on providing creatine with a mixture of 2‐aminoiso‐butyric acid, arginine and lysine.
3. Potassium acetate induced striking improvements in the nitrogen retention efficiencies of chicks fed on AJB diets.
4. Liver weights, as a proportion of body weight, generally increased on feeding AJB diets, the effects being marked with the AJB diet supplemented with arginine and lysine.
5. Hepatic urea concentrations were elevated in all groups receiving AJB. Canavanine, a toxic amino acid component of AJB, could not be detected in acid hydrolysates of livers from chicks fed this legume.
6. Temperature and the volumes of water employed in the preparation of AJB are important determinants of its nutritional value.