Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
11031912 | Research in Veterinary Science | 2018 | 33 Pages |
Abstract
Egg weight, feed intake, and feed conversion rate were not affected by the soybean meal substitution at both inclusion levels of insect meal. Egg mass was positively affected by the insect meal diets, as was the lay percentage, although only at the lowest inclusion level. Dry matter, organic matter, and crude protein digestibility coefficients were lower for the HI50 diet, probably due to the negative effect of chitin. A reduction in serum cholesterol and triglycerides was observed in both insect-meal fed groups, while serum globulin level increased only at the highest level of insect meal inclusion, and, consequently, the albumin to globulin ratio decreased. Overall, a protein replacement of 25% with an insect meal from Hermetia illucens larvae in the diet of laying hens seems to be more suitable and closer to the optimal level.
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Authors
Fulvia Bovera, Rosa Loponte, Maria Elena Pero, Monica Isabella Cutrignelli, Serena Calabrò, Nadia Musco, Giuseppe Vassalotti, Valentina Panettieri, Pietro Lombardi, Giovanni Piccolo, Carmelo Di Meo, Giuliana Siddi, Katerina Fliegerova,