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Effect of Intermittent Periods of High Environmental Temperature on Broiler Performance Responses to Sources of Methionine Activity

42

Citations

17

References

1994

Year

Abstract

The objective of these experiments was to study the effect of intermittent high temperature (IHT) on performance of broilers fed different sources of methionine activity. Two 20-d experiments were conducted in which individually caged 28-d-old cockerels were exposed to a 5-d period of constant high temperature (HT, 30 to 32 C) followed by an equal period of thermoneutral (TN) temperatures (22 C) with the 10-d temperature cycle repeated twice. Birds held at 22 C were TN controls. Grower diets contained 3,275 kcal/kg ME and 20% CP and were supplemented with either 2-hydroxy-4-(methylthio)butanoic acid (HMB, Alimet Feed Supplement) or DL-Met up to a maximum of .88 to .90% total sulfur amino acids (TSAA). In Experiment 1, gain:feed but not average daily gain was greater (P < .05) for HMB than DL-Met birds subjected to IHT (.451 vs .413, respectively), but no treatment differences were observed for TN birds. Results of Experiment 2 demonstrated a linear response to HMB and DL-Met dose in TN (P < .01); however, only HMB-supplemented birds responded similarly in IHT (P < .01). These results are consistent with lower availability of DL-Met as a result of IHT. In vitro experiments indicated that capacity for uptake of DL-Met into intestinal epithelial cells was reduced in heat-stressed birds. Uptake of D-Met was more severely affected than was L-Met. Consequently, a third performance experiment compared the ability of D-Met and L-Met to support growth under conditions of HT. The results indicated that the effect of HT on broiler performance was mediated through reduced utilization of D-Met.

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