Publication | Open Access
Effects of Energy and Protein Levels on Egg Quality and Performance of Laying Hens at Early Second Production Cycle
57
Citations
14
References
2006
Year
NutritionEngineeringFertilityAgricultural EconomicsFeed UtilizationFeed AdditivePublic HealthAnimal PhysiologyAnimal PerformanceAnimal NutritionProtein LevelsFeed EvaluationExperimental DietsAnimal SciencePhysiologyFeed IntakePoultry FarmingEgg QualityMetabolismMeat ScienceFeed RestrictionPoultry Science
One hundred sixty-two commercial 70-wk-old ISA Brown laying hens, previously subjected to induced molting by feed restriction, were distributed in a completely randomized design with 3 × 3 factorial arrangement (i.e., 3 metabolizable energy levels: 2,850; 2,950, and 3,050 kcal of ME/kg) and 3 protein levels (16, 18, and 20% CP), which totaled 9 treatments with 3 replicates of 6 birds each. Experimental diets were offered to birds after the feed restriction period. Performance and egg quality parameters were evaluated in 14-d intervals from the 4th to 12th weeks after forced molting for a total of 4 evaluation periods. Increases in dietary energy and protein levels did not improve performance or egg quality. The levels of 2,850 kcal of ME and 16% protein were sufficient for laying hens starting the second production cycle without decreasing their performance or egg quality.
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