Abstract

Abstract The effects of feeding corn fines (screenings) containing mycotoxin levels at greater than the FDA cautionary levels were evaluated using crossbred pigs [n = 150, 90 barrows and 60 gilts; mean initial body weight (BW) = 6.42 ± 0.06 kg; n =] that were blocked by BW and sex, randomly allotted within block to 6 dietary treatments, and housed 5 pigs/pen resulting in a total of 5 replicates. The corn fines used in this study contained mycotoxin levels that were analyzed to be 20,334 ppb total fumonisin, 1,499 ppb zearalenone, and 5,075 ppb total deoxynivalenol. The corn fines were added into a corn-soybean meal basal diet at 0, 20, 40, and 60% total dietary corn fines (Diets 1-4, respectively). Diet 5 was created by adding 40 ppm of boron (as sodium tetraborate decahydrate, 11.34% B) to Diet 4. Diet 6 was created by adding 0.25% Biofix Plus with FUMzyme (DSM Nutritional Products, Parsippany, NJ) to Diet 4. Dietary treatments were fed for a total of 6 weeks; thereafter, all pigs received a common corn-soybean meal basal diet without fines for about 2 weeks. Data were analyzed by ANOVA using the GLM procedure of SAS with the pen being the experimental unit. Orthogonal polynomial contrasts were used to determine linear and quadratic effects with increasing dietary levels of corn fines in Diets 1-4 as well as preplanned single degree of freedom comparisons. Increasing fines linearly decreased ADG during week 1-6 (P = 0.03), as well as linearly decreased gain/feed ratio during week 1-6 (P = 0.04; Table 1). Comparing Diets 4 and 5 to Diet 1 during week 1-6, there was a decrease in ADG and gain/feed ratio (P < 0.05) but no effect on ADFI (P > 0.05); subsequently, the difference in Diets 4 and 5 compared with Diet 1 was no longer significant for week 1-8. Comparing Diet 6 to Diets 1 and 4 during week 1-6, pigs fed Diet 6 were able to recover 57% of the lost ADG and 30% of the lost BW gain/feed ratio that occurred when corn fines were increased from 0 to 60%. During week 6-8 (all pigs on a common diet), pigs on Diet 5 and 6 had an increase in ADG compared with Diet 1. In conclusion, as mycotoxins increased pigs exhibited negative effects on ADG and gain/feed ratio but the enzyme FUMzyme ameliorated a portion of these effects. Further, the recovery from week 6-8 from all pigs does show the importance of feeding clean corn to optimize ADG, ADFI and gain/feed ratio.

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