Effect of the dietary net energy concentration on feed intake and performance of growing-finishing pigs housed individually
2012
Quiniou, Nathalie | Noblet, Jean | Unité Mixte Technologique Ingénierie des Systèmes de Production Porcine ; Institut du Porc (IFIP) | Physiologie, Environnement et Génétique pour l'Animal et les Systèmes d'Elevage [Rennes] (PEGASE) ; Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA)-AGROCAMPUS OUEST
The effect of dietary NE content on feed intake and performance of pigs was investigatedusing crossbred barrows with initial and fi nal BW of approximately 35 and 110 kg, respectively. Pigs werehoused individually and allowed ad libitum access to feed. Pigs were randomly allotted to 6 wheat andsoybean meal-based diets (8.1, 8.7, 9.3, 9.9, 10.5, and 11.1 MJ NE/kg) with 16 pigs/diet. Ratios betweenstandardized ileal digestible AA and NE were similar in all diets. Over the entire experiment, increasein dietary NE concentration was associated with a decreased ADFI (3.216, 3.216, 3.122, 2.910, 2.732,and 2.684 kg/d, respectively, for diets containing 8.1 to 11.1 MJ NE/kg; linear, P < 0.01). The NE intakeincreased as dietary NE increased from 8.1 to 11.1 MJ NE/kg (26.04, 27.98, 29.03, 28.81, 28.68, and 29.77MJ/d, respectively; linear, P < 0.01, and quadratic, P= 0.06). Average daily gain increased when dietaryNE concentration increased (1.046, 1.126, 1.135, 1.177, 1.156, and 1.152 kg/d, respectively, for dietscontaining 8.1 to 11.1 MJ NE/kg; linear and quadratic, P < 0.01). The increase in dietary NE concentrationwas associated with an increase in dressing percentage (76.5, 77.0, 77.4, 78.0, 78.2, and 78.4% of BW;linear, P < 0.01) but no differences in lean percentage (58.3, 57.9, 58.0, 57.3, 58.1, and 56.4% of HCW,respectively, for diets containing 8.1 to 11.1 MJ NE/kg; P = 0.12). When dietary NE concentrationincreased from 8.1 to 11.1 MJ/kg, the G:F increased (0.326, 0.352, 0.364, 0.405, 0.425, and 0.428 kg/kg,respectively; linear, P < 0.01), but the G:F expressed using the NE system did not change (G:F, 39.97 g/MJNE; P = 0.44). When adjusted to the same dressing yield and lean percentage, the differences in adjustedADG increased among treatments, but the adjusted G:F expressed using the NE system was not infl uencedby dietary energy concentration. These results confirm the ability of individually housed pigs to adjust theirspontaneous feed intake over a very wide range of NE concentrations (8.7 to 10.5 MJ/kg). Under commercialconditions, pigs may experience less variation in ADFI than the results obtained in this experiment because ofdifferences in dietary energy concentrations. However, it seems that only a severe reduction in dietary energyconcentration will be effective in restricting energy intake of pigs that are allowed ad libitum access to feed
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