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Original Articles

Effects of ambient temperature on heat increment of feeding and energy retention in growing broilers maintained at different food intakes

Pages 511-516 | Published online: 28 Jun 2010
 

Abstract

1. Zero-activity heat production (HP), body temperature (Tb) and energy retention were measured in growing broilers maintained at 5 ambient temperatures (Ta) (14 , 17 , 22 , 27 and 32 C) and at 5 feeding rates (ad libitum intake and 75%, 50%, 25% and 0% (fasting) of ad libitum ). 2. Zero-activity HP increased with decreasing Ta and increasing food intake. However, at 14 C, zeroactivity HP in birds fed ad libitum and 75% did not show further increase, but those in birds fed less than 75% of ad libitum increased rapidly . 3. Results of the regression of zero-activity HP on Ta ranging from 32 to 17 C indicated that the slope was affected little by food intake, but the intercept decreased with decreasing food intake. 4. Tb increased significantly with increasing food intake. There was little variation with Ta but, at and above 27 C, a slightly increased Tb was observed only in birds fed ad libitum . 5. Overall effects of Ta and food intake on HIF (% TME intake) were not found, but HIF tended to increase with decreasing food intake at 14 C. Total energy retention and energy retention as fat decreased with decreasing Ta and food intake, although energy retention as protein decreased only with decreasing food intake. 6. Results obtained here suggest that availability of TME is affected little by Ta ranging from 32 to 17 C and that HIF is utilised, in part, to maintain Tb at any Ta.

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