Abstract
1. Female broiler fowl between 21 and 42 d of age were given diets with apparent metabolisable energy (AME) contents ranging from 8 to 15 MJ/kg at each of two crude protein (nitrogen x 6.25; CP) contents (130 and 210 g/kg).
2. Food intake was measured daily for 21 d. Body composition was determined at 42 d and gains in body mass, protein, fat and gross energy calculated by comparison with a group analysed at 21 d. Heat production was calculated by difference between AME intake and energy gain.
3. Decrease of food mass intake with increased dietary AME concentration limited the increase in AME intake to about 25%, despite the near 2‐fold range of AME concentrations.
4. There was no effect of CP concentration on food mass intake. CP intake was directly related to CP: AME ratio.
5. When body weight differences were taken into account, heat production was independent of dietary AME concentration, but increased by about 8% on the higher‐protein diets.
6. There were strong linear correlations between dietary CP:AME ratio and carcase protein: energy ratio, carcase fat content and carcase protein content.
7. It was concluded that the growing fowl responded to dietary nutrient: energy ratio, and the associated differences in nutrient and energy intakes, by varying the rate of energy deposition as fat, without regulatory variation of energy dissipation as heat.