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  • 1
    Publication Date: 1962-04-01
    Description: The effects of copper supplements on the performance up to 45 lb. live weight of early weaned pigs were measured in two experiments. Copper sulphate included as 0·1% of the diet had no apparent adverse effect on the piglets, even when it was introduced immediately after weaning at about 8 lb. live weight, but improved rate of gain by 6 and 12% and feed conversion efficiency by 5 and 6% in the two experiments, respectively. The length of the period of slow growth after weaning was reduced in both experiments. There was no clear advantage in delaying the introduction of the high-copper diet until the pigs weighed 17 or 26 lb.The second experiment was a 2 x 2 factorial, the second factor being the presence or absence in the diet of antibiotic (present throughout in the first experiment). Antibiotic appeared to have slight beneficial effects on growth rate and feed conversion, which were additive to the effects of copper so that the best results were obtained from the diet containing both copper and antibiotic.In a continuation of the first experiment it was found that the early copper treatment had no effect on rates of gain and feed conversion between 55 and 200 lb. live weight or on carcass measurements. The inclusion of a copper supplement in the diet from 55 to 200 lb. improved feed conversion by 4% and rate of gain by 3·5%, reduced the thickness of streak and increased the ratio of width to depth of eye muscle. None of these responses was affected by the copper treatment prior to 55 lb. live weight.
    Print ISSN: 0021-8596
    Electronic ISSN: 1469-5146
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 1976-02-01
    Description: SUMMARYDiets containing 10·5, 13, 15·5 or 18% protein were formulated by progressively replacing barley by a 2:1 mixture of soya-bean meal and fish meal. Each diet was given at three levels of intake proportional to (body weight) 0·73. A total of 144 pigs were used at two centres.Growth rate increased with food intake at each protein level, but to the greatest extent with the 13% crude protein (CP) diet. Growth rate also increased with protein level; the results suggested that there would be no further improvement above 18% CP. The effects of protein concentrationon food conversion generally reflected those on daily gain.Carcass fatness, estimated by both midline and introscope measurements of fat thickness and by specific gravity, increased significantly with the intake of all but the 18% protein diet. When theeffects of food intake were taken into account, carcass fatness increased steadily with reductions in protein level down to 13%; the reduction from 13 to 10·5% produced a much greaterincrease in fatness.The reductions in daily food intake necessary to achieve equal carcass fatness as protein level wasreduced were of the order of 0·1 kg per 1% CP from 18% to 13% CP, but ofthe order of 0·3 kg per 1% CP below 13%.Differences between the sexes were greatest at high protein concentration; significant differences between the centres were found only with the low protein diets.
    Print ISSN: 0021-8596
    Electronic ISSN: 1469-5146
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 1968-12-01
    Description: SUMMARYCitric acid and three antibiotic-type substances—zinc bacitracin, tylosin and formosulphathiazole—were included in dry-meal diets for early weaned pigs up to 20 kg live weight. Two experiments were carried out and in each copper sulphate as 0.1 % of the diet was tested.In the first experiment the diets were supplemented with citric acid, copper sulphate or both citric acid and copper. The pigs given the diet containing both citric acid and copper tended to have the greatest daily live-weight gains and there was a similar trend in favour of the diet containing copper sulphate alone, but these advantages did not reach significance.In the second experiment diets with or without copper sulphate were supplemented with either Zinc Bacitracin, Tylosin or formosulphathiazole. All three ‘antibiotics’ had beneficial effects on rates of gain and feed-conversion efficiency, resulting in average. increases of 15% and 10% respectively. Copper sulphate did not improve the performance of the pigs when included in the basal diet with or without an ‘antibiotic’ and there was no interaction between the copper supplement and any of the other supplements.The performance of the pigs after 20 kg live weight under standard conditions showed little evidence in these experiments that the beneficial effects of feed additive use before this weight persisted during growth to 90 kg live weight or that any of the major measures of carcass quality were affected by the early treatment.
    Print ISSN: 0021-8596
    Electronic ISSN: 1469-5146
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 1978-10-01
    Description: SUMMARYA barley-based diet, containing 16% protein, was given at average daily rates of 1·2–2·5 kg (16–32 MJ, metabolizable energy (ME)) to 32 female and 32 castrated male pigs during their growth from 25 to 90 kg. At high intakes there was no difference in growth rate between the sexes, but with progressive feed restriction the growth of males was more severely retarded than that of the females. Both sexes achieved their minimum feed conversion ratios at approximately 25 MJ. The reductions of fat thickness with progressive feed restriction were greater by approximately 20% in the females than in the males. The two sexes had the same mean back fat thickness when the gilts had 4·7 MJ more ME per day than the castrates. It was inferred that the energy requirement for maintenance was 15% greater in the males than in the females.
    Print ISSN: 0021-8596
    Electronic ISSN: 1469-5146
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 1980-04-01
    Description: SummaryCircadian variation in the apparent digestibility of diets having different physical characteristics was measured in samples taken from the terminal ileum using simple cannulae and marker ratios. Six pigs were used in three latin squares involving three iso-nitrogenous diets (30 g N/kg D.M.). Diet A was based on barley, weatings, soyabean meal and fish meal, diet B included barley, weatings and oats and diet C was purified. The allocation of diet provided 100 g D.M./kg Weg0·75/24 h and in each latin square a different pattern of feed intake was used; diets were given at intervals of either 1 or 12 h, or ad libitum.Differences in the digestibility of the diets were consistently distinguished by the technique. The circadian variation in digestibility was related to the type of diet and could be modified by changing the number and distribution of feeds per day. The results show that an understanding of the variation associated with different diets and feeding methods is necessary for optimizing the strategy for sampling from the terminal ileum.
    Print ISSN: 0021-8596
    Electronic ISSN: 1469-5146
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
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