Poultry (Jun 2024)

Titration of Dietary Histidine during a 22- to 42-Day Feeding Phase following a 0- to 21-Day Feeding Phase with Variable Dietary Histidine Concentrations in Female Cobb 500 Broilers

  • Kenneth B. Nelson,
  • Matheus F. Costa,
  • Savannah C. Wells-Crafton,
  • Shivaram K. Rao,
  • Garrett J. Mullenix,
  • Craig W. Maynard,
  • Michael T. Kidd

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/poultry3020014
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 2
pp. 177 – 189

Abstract

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Further reductions of crude protein in broiler diets may cause essential amino acids traditionally considered to be supplied at adequate levels to become limiting. Requirement data for histidine are currently scarce and this amino acid is uniquely able to be stored within the body. Thus, the objectives of this study were to evaluate female Cobb 500 broiler growth performance and carcass characteristic responsiveness to increasing digestible histidine to digestible lysine ratios (dHis:dLys) during a 22- to 42-day feeding period and determine if dHis:dLys in preceding feeds influence the former responses. Starter diets were formulated to contain dHis:dLys of 33% or 38% and grower diets were formulated to contain dHis:dLys of 28%, 33%, 38%, or 43%, which gave rise to a 2 × 4 factorial arrangement of treatments. No interactions (p > 0.05) between the starter or grower diet dHis:dLys occurred. Increasing the dHis:dLys from 22 to 42 days resulted in body weight gain, feed conversion ratio, and total breast meat yield quadratic responses (p ≤ 0.05). Additionally, it appears that dHis:dLys between 33% and 38% fed during the starter phase does not influence broiler responsiveness to different dHis:dLys during the grower phase.

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