Can betaine partially replace or enhance the effect of methionine by improving broiler growth and carcase characteristics?
Autor: | S Mack, R M McDevitt, Ian R. Wallis |
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Rok vydání: | 2000 |
Předmět: |
Male
Cystine Biology Muscle Development Weight Gain Feed conversion ratio Pectoralis Muscles Eating Random Allocation chemistry.chemical_compound Methionine Animal science Betaine medicine Animals Cysteine Amino Acids Chromatography High Pressure Liquid Cysteine metabolism Broiler General Medicine Chromatography Ion Exchange Adipose Tissue chemistry Biochemistry Animal Science and Zoology Composition (visual arts) medicine.symptom Chickens Weight gain Food Science |
Zdroj: | British Poultry Science. 41:473-480 |
ISSN: | 1466-1799 0007-1668 |
DOI: | 10.1080/713654957 |
Popis: | 1. Growth rates and carcase characteristics were measured in male broiler chickens fed on a control diet deficient in methionine (c. 2.8 g/kg methionine) or a series of diets containing graded levels of betaine or DL-methionine or both additives. 2. We aimed to answer 2 main questions. First, can betaine replace part of the methionine in a broiler ration? Secondly is there a synergism between methionine and betaine? 3. Birds given the control diet or that supplemented only with betaine ate less, grew more slowly, had higher food convension ratio (FCR) and varied more in mass at 42 d than birds fed diets with DL-methionine. Adding 1.2 g/kg DL-methionine to the control ration produced the heaviest birds at 42 d (2500 g) with the 2nd heaviest breast muscle (366 g). 4. After correcting for treatment differences in body mass (analysis of convariance), birds fed on the control diet and the diet supplemented with betaine only, had relatively lighter breast muscles but relatively heavier abdominal fat pads than those of birds given diets supplemented with DL-methionine. However, adding betaine to diets containing added methionine further improved the relative breast muscle yield. 5. After correcting for differences in body mass between treatments, birds fed on diets containing most methionine had lighter viscera than birds fed diets deficient in methionine. This demonstrated gut plasticity, suggesting that the viscera enlarged to sequester methionine from low-methionine diets. 6. Our data refute the hypothesis that betaine can substitute for methionine in broilers fed diets that are marginally deficient in methionine plus cystine. However, betaine may improve carcase composition, especially breast meat yield. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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