Abstract

Olive vegetation water (OVW) is a by-product with a noticeable environmental impact; however, its polyphenols may be reused food and feed manufacture as high-value ingredients with antioxidant/antimicrobial activities. The effect of dietary supplementation with OVW polyphenols on the gut microbiota, carcass and breast quality, shelf life, and lipid oxidation in broiler chickens has been studied. Chicks were fed diets supplemented with crude phenolic concentrate (CPC) obtained from OVW (220 and 440 mg/kg phenols equivalent) until reaching commercial size. Cloacal microbial community (rRNA16S sequencing) was monitored during the growth period. Breasts were submitted to culture-dependent and -independent microbiological analyses during their shelf-life. Composition, fatty acid concentration, and lipid oxidation of raw and cooked thawed breasts were measured. Growth performance and gut microbiota were only slightly affected by the dietary treatments, while animal age influenced the cloacal microbiota. The supplementation was found to reduce the shelf life of breasts due to the growth of spoilers. Chemical composition and lipid oxidation were not affected. The hydroxytyrosol (HT) concentration varied from 178.6 to 292.4 ug/kg in breast muscle at the beginning of the shelf-life period. The identification of HT in meat demonstrates that the absorption and metabolism of these compounds was occurring efficiently in the chickens.

Highlights

  • Aviculture is an efficient and sustainable animal productive system

  • The addition of antioxidants, such as phenolics, to the diets of broilers to reduce the effects of stressors and stimulate an immunity response has been proposed in several studies [3,4,5]

  • The enrichment of the diets of chickens with phenols obtained by the filtration and concentration of oil mill vegetation water for 24 days was not associated with differences in animal growth, the feed conversion rate, or the carcass yield

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Summary

Introduction

Aviculture is an efficient and sustainable animal productive system. Intensive selection plans over the last fifty years have allowed us to obtain chickens that convert feed into muscle mass with a high level of efficiency [1]. Phenolic compounds are natural antioxidants and antimicrobials derived from various plant materials [6] Evidence of their beneficial effect on human health has been demonstrated by several epidemiological studies [7,8], with the health-promoting activities of dietary being confirmed by in vitro data. These studies have demonstrated an association between the consumption of phenolic compounds rich foods and a reduced risk of developing several diseases, including chronic diseases and cancer [9,10,11]

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