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Original Articles

Effects of microbial phytase, produced by solid-state fermentation, on the performance and nutrient utilisation of broilers fed maize- and wheat-based diets

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Pages 710-718 | Accepted 08 May 2003, Published online: 12 Jul 2010
 

Abstract

1. The influence of a microbial phytase on the performance, toe ash contents and nutrient utilisation of male broilers fed diets based on maize and wheat was investigated. The experiment was conducted as 2 × 2 × 2 factorial arrangement of treatments. Within the factorial, two diet types (maize–soy or wheat–soy) containing two levels of non-phytate phosphorus (3·0 or 4·5 g/kg) were evaluated and each level of non-phytate phosphorus was supplemented with 0 or 500 PU phytase/kg diet. Each of the 8 dietary treatments were fed to 6 pens of 8 birds from d 1 to 21 post-hatching.

2. Main effects of diet type and phytase were observed for all parameters. Main effect of non-phytate phosphorus was significant only for feed/gain and toe ash contents. Phytase addition improved weight gains irrespective of diet type or non-phytate phosphorus level, but the magnitude of improvement in the phosphorus-deficient wheat–soy diet was greater, resulting in a diet type × non-phytate phosphorus interaction. Responses in toe ash contents were noted only in phosphorus-deficient diets, as indicated by a non-phytate phosphorus × phytase interaction.

3. Phytase addition improved apparent metabolisable energy values of wheat-based diets, but had little effect on the apparent metabolisable energy of maize-based diets as shown by a diet type × phytase interaction. The apparent metabolisable energy was not influenced by dietary non-phytate P.

4. Phytase improved ileal nitrogen digestibility in both diet types, but the responses to added phytase tended to be higher in wheat-based diets, as shown by a diet type × phytase interaction.

5. Increasing the dietary non-phytate phosphorus level reduced phosphorus digestibility and increased excreta phosphorus content. Addition of phytase improved phosphorus digestibility, but the increments were higher in low phosphorus diets resulting in a non-phytate phosphorus × phytase interaction. Phytase addition tended to lower the excreta phosphorus content, but the effects were greater in birds fed low phosphorus diets, as shown by a non-phytate phosphorus × phytase interaction.

Notes

1Zero or 500 PU of phytase was added to each of the diets.

2Poultry mineral 4 (Tegel Foods Ltd, Auckland, New Zealand). Supplied per kg diet: Mn 125 mg, Zn 60 mg, Cu 3 mg, Mo 0·5 mg, Co 0·3 mg, I 1 mg, Fe 25 mg, Se 200 µg, choline chloride 638 mg.

3Broiler starter vitamin (Tegel Foods Ltd, Auckland, New Zealand). Supplied per kg diet: trans-retinol 3·33 mg, cholecalciferol 60 µg, dl-α-tocopheryl acetate 60 mg, menadione 4 mg, thiamine 3·0 mg, riboflavin 12 mg, calcium pantothenate 12·8 mg, niacin 35 mg, pyridoxine 10 mg, folic acid 5·2 mg, cyanocobalamin 0·017 mg, biotin 0·2 mg, antioxidant 100 mg.

1Without or with the addition of 500 PU/kg diet.

2Means are based on 6 pens of 8 birds each per treatment group.

3Each main effect mean is based on 24 pens of 8 birds each.

1Without or with the addition of 500 PU/kg diet.

2Means are based on 6 pens of 8 birds each per treatment group.

3Each main effect mean is based on 24 pens of 8 birds each.

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