Poultry Science (Aug 2021)
Phosphorus digestibility and relative phosphorus bioavailability in two dried black soldier fly larvae meals and a defatted black soldier fly larvae meal in broiler chickens
Abstract
ABSTRACT: Two chicken assays were conducted to determine P availability, using three different approaches, for 2 black soldier fly larvae meals (BSFL 1 and 3) and one partially-defatted BSFL. Experiment 1 was conducted to determine ileal P digestibility and total tract P retention. Three experimental diets containing a BSFL as the only source of P were fed to broiler chickens from 19 to 22 days of age. Each diet contained 0.25% total dietary P. Ileal digesta and excreta were collected on day 22. Ileal digestibility of P was 87%, 75%, and 88% for BSFL 1, BSFL 3, and partially-defatted BSFL, respectively. Total tract P retention was 87%, 73%, and 85% for BSFL 1, BSFL 3, and partially-defatted BSFL, respectively. The objective of experiment 2 was to determine the relative bioavailability of P in the 3 insect meals relative to KH2PO4 using a chicken bone ash bioassay. Chickens were fed one of nine dietary treatments from 8 to 22 days of age. These diets included a P-deficient cornstarch-dextrose-SBM based diet (0.14% nonphytate P) or that diet supplemented with 0.05% or 0.10% P from KH2PO4, 7% or 14% BSFL 1, 8%, or 16% BSFL 3, and 8% or 16% partially-defatted BSFL. The slope-ratio method using multiple regression for tibia ash regressed on supplemental P intake was used to calculate the relative bioavailability of P where values for BSFL 1, BSFL 3, and partially-defatted BSFL were 54%, 51%, and 57%, respectively, relative to KH2PO4. The results of this study indicated that availability of P in BSFL based on ileal P digestibility and total tract P retention values was high, whereas relative bioavailability values for P based on tibia ash were approximately 20 to 30 percentage units lower.