Abstract

The effects of aflatoxin and fumonisin and their combination on egg production and quality, as well as the efficacy of a mycotoxin adsorbent in reducing or eliminating these effects in commercial layers. A number of 168 layers with initial age of 37 weeks were submitted to an experimental period of 56 days. A completely randomized experimental design in a 3x2+1 factorial arrangement was applied (3 treatments with mycotoxins: aflatoxin (AF), fumonisin (FU), or aflatoxin + fumonisin (AF+FU); 2 treatments with or without adsorbent; and a control group that was fed no mycotoxins, nor adsorbent), totaling 7 treatments with 6 replicated of 4 birds/cage. The dietary inclusion levels were 1ppm AF, 25ppm FU, and 2 kg adsorbent/ton feed. Birds fed AF presented the lowest percentage of lay (p=0.0594). Egg mass was the lowest (p<0.05) in the AF+FU treatment (49.49g). The treatment with AF resulted in higher eggshell thickness and strength (p<0.05) than the FU treatment and the control group. The inclusion of the adsorbent in the AF contaminated feed reduced eggshell strength, which returned to levels similar to those of the control group. The observed changes indicate that aflatoxin is toxic at a concentration of 1ppm, and that the effects of fumonisin were less evident as a function of the low dose applied. The inclusion of the glucan (2kg/ton) effectively reverted some of the toxic effects of aflatoxin and, at lower extension, those of fumonisin, when these mycotoxins were invidually added to commercial layer feeds.

Highlights

  • The progress of poultry production is a result of diverse technological developments in nutrition and management techniques

  • All feeds were analyzed for the presence of mycotoxins, and the results showed that the control feed was free from mycotoxins, and the contaminated feeds presented aflatoxin and fumonisin concentrations similar to the expected values

  • No interactions (p>0.05) between mycotoxins and adsorbent were observed for none of the evaluated performance parameters (Table 2) and nor treatment effects (p>0.05) on feed intake, feed conversion ratio, or mean egg weight

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The progress of poultry production is a result of diverse technological developments in nutrition and management techniques. Significant economic losses may occur due to the presence of natural feed contaminants, such as mycotoxins, which are secondary metabolites produced by fungi that naturally grow in cereals and other grains. Aflatoxins are produced by the fungi Aspergillus flavus, A. parasiticus, and A. nominus (Kurtzman et al, 1987), which grow in hot and humid climates, and have mutagenic, carcinogenic, and teratogenic effects (Ellis et al, 1991). Aflatoxins influence the metabolism of poultry, reducing the activity of enzymes that digest starch, proteins, lipids, and nucleic acids, decrease blood protein, total cholesterol, and urea, and increase the activity of serum enzymes that indicate liver damage (Aravind et al, 2003). The main manifestations of chronic aflatoxicosis in layers are reduced egg production and weight, and increase in liver fat levels (Rosmaninho et al, 2001)

Methods
Results
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