Animal (Jan 2007)

Foreword: Predicting the responses of animals to their nutrients - quo vadimus?

  • I. Kyriazakis

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 1, no. 1
pp. 55 – 56

Abstract

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For its 2006 Annual Meeting BSAS organised an invited session on ‘Responses to Nutrients’. The session was appropriately chaired by Professor Colin Whittemore, who was responsible for the first systematic approach to the integration of information about an animal its feed and the environment in which it was kept, with a view to predicting its responses and simulating its performance (Whittemore and Fawcett, 1976). In his usual indomitable fashion Professor Whittemore questioned whether there was a need for such a session. Was there anything that we did not already about know animals responded to their intake of nutrients? After all models of growth for pigs and poultry have in the past 30 years been able not only to predict such responses, but at the same time to deal with the more challenging task of voluntary feed intake prediction. Such models have been used increasingly to optimise feed and feeding programmes in pig and poultry enterprises worldwide. On the other hand, in ruminants many applied feeding models are still largely based on meeting animal requirements.