Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8491543 | Animal Feed Science and Technology | 2014 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
Striving for maximum replacement of soybean meal (SBM) with field pea in swine diets is economically important for pork producers. To explore, effects of increasing inclusion of field pea by substituting SBM on diet nutrient digestibility and growth performance of young pigs were evaluated. In total, 260 pigs (8.5Â kg) starting 1 week after weaning at 19 days of age were fed Phase 1 diets for 2 weeks (day 1-14) and sequentially Phase 2 diets for 3 weeks (day 15-35). Five pelleted wheat-based diets including 0, 100, 200, 300 and 400Â g yellow field pea (Pisum sativum L., subsp. hortense)/kg in substitution for up to 300Â g SBM/kg and 100Â g wheat/kg were fed. Phase 1 and 2 diets were formulated to provide 10.2 and 9.8Â MJ net energy (NE)/kg, and 1.2 and 1.0Â g standardised ileal digestible (SID) Lys/MJ NE, respectively. Diets were balanced for NE by reducing dietary canola oil from 48 to 34Â g/kg and from 27 to 12Â g/kg for Phase 1 and 2 diets, respectively, and for amino acids by increasing crystalline amino acids. Increasing inclusion of field pea to 400Â g/kg linearly reduced (P<0.001) the apparent total tract digestibility coefficient (CATTD) of crude protein (CP) by 7% and of gross energy by 2% in Phase 1 diets, but only linearly reduced (P<0.05) CATTD of CP by 1% in Phase 2 diets. Increasing inclusion of field pea to 400Â g/kg quadratically reduced (P<0.001) calculated diet NE values by 0.4Â MJ/kg as fed in Phase 1 and linearly reduced (P<0.001) calculated diet NE values by 0.2Â MJ/kg as fed in Phase 2 diets. The NE value for field pea used for diet formulation was overestimated for pigs immediately after weaning. For day 1-7, increasing inclusion of field pea did not affect average daily feed intake (ADFI) but linearly reduced (P<0.01) average daily gain (ADG) and feed efficiency (G:F). Growth performance was not affected for day 8-14 and 15-21. Increasing inclusion of field pea quadratically increased (P<0.05) ADFI and ADG but did not affect G:F for day 22-28. For day 29-35, increasing inclusion of field pea tended to linearly increase (P<0.10) ADFI, linearly increased (P<0.05) ADG, but did not affect G:F. Overall (day 1-35), increasing dietary inclusion of field pea did not affect ADFI, ADG or G:F. In conclusion, up to 400Â g/kg field pea can entirely replace SBM in nursery diets formulated to equal NE value and SID amino acid content without detrimental effects on growth performance after a 7-day adaptation.
Keywords
ADFstandardised ileal digestibleCATTDADGADFISBMANFTIAG:FField peaacid detergent fibrenet energyDigestible energygross energyPigFeed efficiencyGrowthSiDapparent total tract digestibility coefficientAnti-nutritional factorTrypsin inhibitor activityDigestibilityLysineLYSdry matteraverage daily gainAverage daily feed intakebody weightcrude proteinPerformanceSoybean meal
Related Topics
Life Sciences
Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Animal Science and Zoology
Authors
J.L. Landero, L.F. Wang, E. Beltranena, R.T. Zijlstra,