Abstract
The present study was conducted to investigate whether there was any effect of carbohydrate sources on the magnitude of differences in growth and tissue weights found between germ-free and conventional environments in the chicken. Germ-free and conventional birds were allowed free access to a purified diet in which glucose or fructose was used as a sole carbohydrate source from 7 to 17 days of age. Growth performance and visceral weights were measured at the end of the experiment. The results indicated that there was no difference in growth, feed intake, or feed efficiency between the two environments, but that feeding fructose increased feed intake and decreased feed efficiency compared with feeding glucose. The conventional birds had heavier visceral organ weights including liver, jejuno-ileum, and cecum than did the germ-free counterparts. Feeding fructose resulted in lighter liver weight and heavier weights of jejuno-ileum and cecum than feeding glucose. It was concluded that consuming fructose might increase the lower gut weight of the chicken, as was found by the association with normal microflora, but might not affect overall growth compared with consuming glucose.
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