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Nutrition

Effects of different rates of drying cassava root on its toxicity to broiler chicks

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Pages 1025-1041 | Received 22 Aug 1991, Published online: 08 Nov 2007
 

Abstract

1. The effects of drying cassava root at different rates on its composition and toxicity to broiler chicks were examined. Un‐peeled roots from a high‐cyanide cultivar of cassava were chipped and dried at 25°C to a moisture content of below 100 g/kg over 24 h for fast‐dried meal (FD) or 72 h for slow‐dried meal (SD). The meals were incorporated at 250 and 500 g/kg into semi‐synthetic diets which were fed to day‐old broiler chicks as mash or pellets in separate experiments.

2. The two drying rates produced meals with similar concentrations of polyphenols, but different concentrations of cyanogens, the latter being 38 and 482 mg total cyanide/kg for SD and FD, respectively. The linamarin, acetonecyanohydrin or total cyanide content measurements of pelleted diets were highly correlated.

3. Growth rates of chicks fed on SD‐based diets were significantly higher than those of chicks fed on FD‐based diets. Compared with a control diet, weight gain of chicks fed on the 500 g FD/kg diet (containing 258 mg total cyanide/kg) was 77% lower, although performance also appeared to be reduced at 142 mg total cyanide/kg.

4. The ratio of water: food intake of chicks was higher in FD than in SD groups, and this was reflected in the high water content of excreta. There was increased bile excretion, the chloretic effect increasing with the cyanogen content of diet. Pancreas weights were lower in FD than in SD groups in experiment 1 (mash diets), but not in experiment 2 (pelleted diets), while there was a significant interaction between drying method and cassava inclusion rate on liver weight in experiment 2, but not in experiment 1. There were no effects on the mortality rate.

5. Pelleting of diets generated high temperatures, but did not significantly alter the cyanogen concentration or the growth of the chicks.

6. Thus, slower rates of drying cassava roots produce meals with lower cyanogen concentration that are, consequently, less toxic to 1025 broiler chicks. Cassava root meal of less than 40 mg total cyanide/kg can be fed to broiler chicks at 500 g/kg without any adverse effects.

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