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Inclusion of sorghum, millet and cottonseed meal in broiler diets: a meta-analysis of effects on performance

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 March 2015

D. I. Batonon-Alavo*
Affiliation:
INRA, UR83 Recherches Avicoles, F-37380 Nouzilly, France Research Centre for Animal Nutrition and Health, DSM Nutritional Products France, F-68128 Village-Neuf, France
M. Umar Faruk
Affiliation:
Research Centre for Animal Nutrition and Health, DSM Nutritional Products France, F-68128 Village-Neuf, France
P. Lescoat
Affiliation:
AgroParisTech, UMR 1048 SADAPT, F-75005 Paris, France
G. M. Weber
Affiliation:
DSM Nutritional Products Ltd, Nutrition Innovation Center, CH-4002 Basel, Switzerland
D. Bastianelli
Affiliation:
CIRAD, UMR SELMET, Systèmes d'élevage méditerranéens et tropicaux, Baillarguet TA C-112/A, F-34398 Montpellier, France

Abstract

A meta-analysis was conducted (i) to evaluate broiler response to partial or total substitution of corn by sorghum and millet and (ii) to determine the effect of soybean meal replacement by cottonseed meal in broiler diet. The database included 190 treatments from 29 experiments published from 1990 to 2013. Bird responses to an experimental diet were calculated relative to the control (Experimental−Control), and were submitted to mixed-effect models. Results showed that diets containing millet led to similar performance as the corn-based ones for all parameters, whereas sorghum-based diets decreased growth performance. No major effect of the level of substitution was observed with millet or cottonseed meal. No effect of the level of substitution of sorghum on feed intake was found; however, growth performance decreased when the level of substitution of corn by sorghum increased. Cottonseed meal was substituted to soybean meal up to 40% and found to increase feed intake while reducing growth performance. Young birds were not more sensitive to these ingredients than older birds since there was no negative effect of these ingredients on performance in the starter phase. Results obtained for sorghum pointed out the necessity to find technological improvements that will increase the utilization of these feedstuffs in broiler diet. An additional work is scheduled to validate these statistical results in vivo and to evaluate the interactions induced with the simultaneous inclusions of sorghum, millet and cottonseed meal in broiler feeding.

Information

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Animal Consortium 2015
Figure 0

Table 1 Diets nutrients composition and average performance collected in sorghum, millet and cottonseed meal databases used for the meta-analysis (mean±s.e.)

Figure 1

Figure 1 Relationship between the calculated metabolizable energy (ME) and CP contents and CP and amino acids contents of diets used in sorghum (●), millet (▲) and cottonseed meal (+) experiments, respectively. Each point is a treatment average and observations are connected within each experiment. The dashed lines represent the linear adjustment between the two variables.

Figure 2

Figure 2 Average daily gain (g/bird per day) as a function of average daily feed intake (g/bird per day) for sorghum, millet and cottonseed meal during starter (a) and grower (b) phases. The lines represent the linear regression between both variables. The overall adjustments for starter phase were: ADG=−4.60+0.75ADFI (R2=0.91) for sorghum; ADG=10.75+0.40ADFI (R2=0.48) for millet; ADG=−7.45+0.78ADFI (R2=0.69) for cottonseed meal. Grower phase. Sorghum: ADG=10.87+0.31ADFI (R2=0.52); millet: ADG=28.46+0.30ADFI (R2=0.64); cottonseed meal: ADG=62.02+0.07ADFI (R2=0.02). Where ADG=average daily gain (g/bird per day), ADFI=average daily feed intake (g/bird per day).

Figure 3

Table 2 Responses relative to control diet for feed intake, nutrients intakes and growth performance to sorghum, millet and cottonseed meal utilization

Figure 4

Figure 3 Global and within-study responses of δADFI, δADG and δFCR to an increasing level of substitution of sorghum (●), millet (▲) and cottonseed meal (+) for starter phase and grower phase. Observations belonging to one trial are connected with a solid line. ADFI=average daily feed intake; ADG=average daily gain; FCR=feed conversion ratio.

Figure 5

Table 3 Parameter estimates obtained from the mixed effects models (equation(2)) describing the responses in δADFI, δADG and δFCR as a function of level of substitution and the production phase for sorghum-, millet- and cottonseed meal-based diets

Figure 6

Figure 4 Plots of the Residual (Observed−Predicted) v. predicted values of the mixed effects models (equation (2)) for sorghum- (●), millet- (▲) and cottonseed meal- (+) based diets. Dashed lines represent the linear adjustment of residuals to predicted values.

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