Abstract

BackgroundTwo experiments were conducted to estimate the net energy (NE) of corn, soybean meal, expeller-pressed rapeseed meal (EP-RSM) and solvent-extracted rapeseed meal (SE-RSM) using indirect calorimetry and to validate the NE of these four ingredients using pig growth performance.MethodsIn Exp.1, 24 barrows (initial BW = 36.4 ± 1.6 kg) were allotted to 1 of 4 diets which included a corn basal diet, a corn-soybean meal basal diet and two rapeseed meal diets containing 20% EP-RSM (9.5% ether extract) or SE-RSM (1.1% ether extract) substituted for corn and soybean meal. The design allowed the calculation of NE values of corn, soybean meal and rapeseed meals according to the difference method. In Exp.2, 175 growing pigs (initial BW = 36.0 ± 5.2 kg) were fed 1 of 5 diets for 28 d, with five pigs per pen and seven replications (pens) per treatment in order to validate the measured energy values. Diets were a corn-soybean meal diet and four diets including 10% or 20% EP-RSM and 10% or 20% SE-RSM.ResultsThe NE of corn, soybean meal, EP-RSM and SE-RSM were 12.46, 11.34, 11.71 and 8.83 MJ/kg DM, respectively. The NE to ME ratio of corn (78%) was similar to tabular values, however, the NE to ME ratios of soybean meal (70%) and rapeseed meal (76%) were greater than tabular values. The greater NE value in EP-RSM than in SE-RSM is consistent with its higher EE content. Increasing EP-RSM or SE-RSM did not affect the growth performance of pigs and the caloric efficiency of NE was comparable for all diets.ConclusionsThe NE of EP-RSM was similar to soybean meal, and both were greater than SE-RSM. The DE, ME and NE values measured in Exp.1 are confirmed by results of Exp. 2 with comparable caloric efficiencies of DE, ME or NE for all diets.

Highlights

  • Two experiments were conducted to estimate the net energy (NE) of corn, soybean meal, expeller-pressed rapeseed meal (EP-RSM) and solvent-extracted rapeseed meal (SE-RSM) using indirect calorimetry and to validate the NE of these four ingredients using pig growth performance

  • The composition of the four diets is in agreement with the ingredients percentages and their composition with the lowest crude protein (CP) content in the corn diet and the highest CP contents in the rapeseed meal diets

  • Exp.1: Net energy experiment The apparent total tract digestibility (ATTD) of dry matter (DM), organic matter (OM) and gross energy (GE) was similar in the corn and corn-soybean meal diets, which values were greater than in the two rapeseed meal diets (Table 4, 90.2% vs. 86.6% for ATTD of DM, 90.3% vs. 87.0% for ATTD of OM, 88.3% vs. 85.1% for ATTD of GE; P < 0.01)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Two experiments were conducted to estimate the net energy (NE) of corn, soybean meal, expeller-pressed rapeseed meal (EP-RSM) and solvent-extracted rapeseed meal (SE-RSM) using indirect calorimetry and to validate the NE of these four ingredients using pig growth performance. There are two primary rapeseed co-products associated with oil extraction processing methods: expeller-pressed rapeseed meal (EP-RSM) containing 10% to 15% residual oil and solvent-extraction rapeseed meal (SE-RSM) containing much less oil (1–2%) than EP-RSM. In the current experiment, we have measured the NE of all ingredients in a first experiment (Exp. 1) and used the obtained values in a second validation experiment (Exp. 2). The NE of corn, soybean meal, EP-RSM and SE-RSM were determined by indirect calorimetry and these four ingredients were used subsequently to prepare five diets fed in a growth trial

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call