Abstract

Growing-finishing pigs should consume each day the minimum amounts of energy and amino acids needed for maximum lean deposition. This should optimize performance traits, carcass leanness, and N excretion. These ideal conditions are difficult to achieve under experimental or farm conditions due to the factors affecting amino acid requirements and feed intake on a daily basis. Lean deposition rate and sex are two of the major factors affecting amino acid needs. If possible, maximum lean deposition rates should be determined for each herd in order to customize feeding programs, and split-sex feeding will improve N utilization. Amino acid requirements have been determined empirically and by the factorial method. The latter is preferred if the efficiency of use of absorbed amino acids can be accurately determined. Development of computer models will likely be needed to accomplish this. Apparent ileal digestibility of amino acids is the most practical means of estimating amino acid absorption at present, although it likely overestimates amino acid availability for some amino acids. Crystalline amino acids can be used to improve amino acid balance and reduce excessive intake of protein which should improve feed efficiency. A portion of the high-quality protein feeds in pig diets can be replaced by synthetic amino acids without sacrificing performance, but the effects of these substitutions on carcass merit is uncertain. Excretion of N, and the concomitant reduction of N in manure that has to be disposed of, can be manipulated nutritionally by increased use of crystalline amino acids to lower dietary protein, by use of highly digestible feedstuffs and by precise matching of amino acid needs to amino acid supply. Use of these factors could lead to a reduction in total N wastes of 20–30%.

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