Abstract
A total of 296 mixed-sex pigs (PIC 327 × 1050; 14.5 ± 3.0 lb BW and 21 d of age) were used in a 31-d experiment evaluating the effect of further processing methods for soybean meal on weanling pig growth performance. There were 11 replicate pens per treatment with 6 or 7 pigs per pen. At weaning, pigs were allotted to pens by initial weight to 1 of 4 treatments in a completely randomized design. Experimental treatments were: (1) negative control (NC: no specialty protein sources), (2) fermented soybean meal processing method 1 (FSBM 1), (3) fermented soybean meal processing method 2 (FSBM 2), and (4) enzymatically treated soybean meal (ETS). The specialty soybean meal protein sources were included in Phase 1 (d 0 to 7) and Phase 2 (d 7 to 20) diets at 5%, and diets were formulated to the same standardized ileal digestible (SID) amino acid level. All pigs were subsequently fed a common diet during Phase 3 (d 20 to 31). Phase 1 and 2 diets were fed in pellet form, whereas the Phase 3 common diet was fed in meal form. Nutrient analyses of specialty soybean meal ingredients were conducted and generally matched those used for diet formulation. From d 0 to 7, pigs fed FSBM 2 had increased (P < 0.05) ADG and BW compared with pigs fed ETS, whereas those fed NC and FSBM 1 were intermediate. No other differences were observed between treatments for growth or BW during the experimental period, common period, or overall. In summary, further processed soybean meal sources did not improve nursery pig growth compared with traditional soybean meal.; Swine Day, Manhattan, KS, November 20, 2014
Highlights
Weaned pigs have limited ability to utilize plant protein sources because of their relatively immature digestive systems
The specialty soybean meal protein sources were included in Phase 1 (d 0 to 7) and Phase 2 (d 7 to 20) diets at 5%, and diets were formulated to the same standardized ileal digestible (SID) amino acid level
Phase 1 and 2 diets were fed in pellet form, whereas the Phase 3 common diet was fed in meal form
Summary
Weaned pigs have limited ability to utilize plant protein sources because of their relatively immature digestive systems. This is why specialty animal protein sources are frequently used in diets as a source of readily available protein and amino acids; the high cost associated with the animal by-products creates a need for an economical plant-derived specialty protein source. Soybean meal fermented in the presence of Aspergillus oryzae and Bacillus subtilis (FSBM) may be used in diets fed to weanling pigs in place of specialty animal proteins without negatively affecting ME or NE of the diet or the standardized ileal digestibility (SID) of amino acids (Rojas and Stein, 20133; Cervantes-Pahm 20104). The objective of this study was to determine the impact of partially replacing conventional soybean meal with fermented or enzymatically treated soybean meal on nursery pig growth performance
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