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Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of high temperature and low-protein diets on the performance of growing-finishing pigs.

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TLDR
The results indicate that a 4 percentage unit reduction of dietary CP level reduces N excretion but does not affect growth and carcass composition as long as the ratio between essential AA and NE are kept optimal, and diets with reduced CP limit the effect of high ambient temperature on ADFI.
Abstract
The effects of reducing CP level in combination with an increase in ambient temperature (29 vs 22 degrees C) on performance and carcass composition were studied in a factorial arrangement of treatments involving 66 Pietrain x (Landrace x Large White) barrows from 27 to 100 kg BW. Animals were fed at each temperature one of three experimental diets that provided 0.85 or 0.70 g of digestible lysine per megajoule of NE, in the growing (27 to 65 kg) and the finishing (65 to 100 kg) phases, respectively. Diet 1 was a corn, wheat, and soybean meal diet formulated without crystalline AA; CP levels were 20.3 and 17.6% for the growing and the finishing phases, respectively. In Diets 2 and 3, CP level was reduced by substituting part of the soybean meal with corn and wheat (Diet 2), or with corn, wheat, and 4% fat (Diet 3). Diets 2 and 3 were supplemented with AA and balanced according to the ideal protein concept. The CP levels of Diets 2 and 3 were, respectively, 15.8 and 16.3% in the growing phase, and 13.4 and 13.8% in the finishing phase. Pigs were housed individually and had free access to feed and water. The ADFI was measured daily, and animals were weighed weekly. Carcass composition was measured at slaughter (100 kg BW). Increasing ambient temperature from 22 to 29 degrees C resulted in a 15% reduction in ADFI and 13% lower ADG. Leaner carcasses (P 0.05). At 29 degrees C, ADFI was not different (P > 0.05) between diets and daily NE intake was higher (P 0.05) but increased mainly fat deposition. These results indicate that a 4 percentage unit reduction of dietary CP level reduces N excretion (minus 37%) but does not affect growth and carcass composition as long as the ratio between essential AA and NE are kept optimal. In addition, diets with reduced CP limit the effect of high ambient temperature on ADFI. Finally, our results demonstrate the significance of using NE, rather than DE or ME, for formulating diets.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Heat stress effects on livestock: molecular, cellular and metabolic aspects, a review.

TL;DR: It has recently been shown that heat stress disturbs the steady state concentrations of free radicals, resulting in both cellular and mitochondrial oxidative damage.
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Energy value of pig feeds: effect of pig body weight and energy evaluation system.

TL;DR: A satisfactory characterization of the energy value of feeds should be based on their NE content, and factors affecting nutrients digestibility (e.g., BW and feed processing) should also be taken into account.
Journal ArticleDOI

Influences of dietary protein level, amino acid supplementation and environmental temperature on performance, body composition, organ weights and total heat production of growing pigs.

TL;DR: The data indicate that lowering dietary CP and supplementing crystalline AA will decrease total heat production in growing pigs whether they are housed in a thermal-neutral or heat-stressed environment.
Journal ArticleDOI

Influence of dietary protein level, amino acid supplementation, and dietary energy levels on growing-finishing pig performance and carcass composition.

TL;DR: It is suggested that pigs fed low-CP, AA-supplemented diets have performance and carcass characteristics similar to pigs fed higher levels of CP and that alterations in dietary NE do not have a discernible effect on pig performance or carcass composition.
Journal ArticleDOI

Voluntary feed intake in growing-finishing pigs: A review of the main determining factors and potential approaches for accurate predictions

TL;DR: There is a need for a means to accurately quantify voluntary feed intake in pigs as affected by the different interacting factors, and until quantitative effects of these interactions are established it is suggested that feed intake be monitored.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Use of Detergents in the Analysis of Fibrous Feeds. IV. Determination of Plant Cell-Wall Constituents

TL;DR: In this paper, a standardization of the method is based on a nutritional concept which defines fiber as insoluble vegetable matter which is indigestible by proteolytic and diastatic enzymes and which cannot be utilized except by microbial fennentation in the digestive tracts of animais.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Versatile Growth Model with Statistically Stable Parameters

TL;DR: A new comprehensive growth model is presented which includes numerous historical models as special cases and is derived from a concise biological principle which, unlike earlier theories, relates to growth acceleration.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effect on performance and carcass characteristics of nursery to finisher pigs fed reduced crude protein, amino acid-supplemented diets

TL;DR: The reduction in growth performance, feed efficiency, longissimus muscle area, and percentage of muscle in pigs fed the low-CP diets was alleviated by LYS, TRP, and THR supplementation, and although pigs feeding theLowCP diets supplemented with AA had reduced average and 10th rib backfat depths, these fat depth measures remained greater than those of animals fed the high- CP diets.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dietary protein affects nitrogen excretion and ammonia emission from slurry of growing-finishing pigs.

TL;DR: In this article, the effects of dietary protein on nitrogen excretion and ammonia emission from slurry of growing-finishing pigs were studied both in vitro and in a pig house.
Journal ArticleDOI

Metabolic utilization of energy and maintenance requirements in growing pigs: effects of sex and genotype.

TL;DR: Even though the muscle mass exceeds to a large extent the visceral mass in animals, the contribution of muscle to MEm was lower than that of viscera for most groups, indicating that different groups of animals have different maintenance requirements.
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