Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
http://acervodigital.unesp.br/handle/11449/67204
- Title:
- Dietary electrolyte balance for broiler chickens exposed to thermoneutral or heat-stress environments
- Universidade Estadual Paulista (UNESP)
- Hooge Consulting Service, Inc.
- Church and Dwight Company, Inc.
- 0032-5791
- Ross male broiler chicks (n = 480) on new litter were used in a randomized block design with two blocks (environmental rooms) and four treatments having four replicate pens (1.0 × 2.5 m; 15 chicks) each to evaluate dietary electrolyte balance (DEB; P < 0.05). Two rooms were 1) thermoneutral (Weeks 1 through 6, with decreasing maximum from 32 to 25°C and minimum from 28 to 19°C; relative humidity 49 to 58%) and 2) cyclic daily heat stress (Weeks 1 and 2, thermoneutral; Weeks 2 through 6, maximum temperatures 35, 35, 33, and 33°C, respectively; and minimum temperatures 23, 20, 19, and 19°C, respectively; relative humidity 51 to 54%). The DEB treatments (0, 140, 240, or 340 mEq Na + K - Cl/kg) had NaHCO3 plus NH4Cl, or KHCO3, or both added to corn-soybean meal mash basal diets with 0.30% salt (NaCl). In the thermoneutral room, DEB 240 increased 42-d weight gain and 44-d lymphocyte percentage and decreased heterophil percentage and heterophil to lymphocyte ratio compared to the DEB 40 treatment. The DEB 240 diets had 0.35 and 0.35% Na and 0.37% and 0.29% Cl in starter (0.75% K) and grower (0.67% K) diets, respectively. No DEB treatment differences were found in the heat stress room. For combined rooms, 42-d feed intake was higher for DEB 240 than for DEB 40. The 21-d weight gain was higher for DEB 240 than for DEB 40 or 140; and 21-d feed/gain was lower for DEB 40 than for DEB 340. The predicted maximum point of inflection for 21- and 42-d weight gains were DEB 250 and 201, with highest 42-d feed intake at 220.
- 1-Mar-2003
- Poultry Science, v. 82, n. 3, p. 428-435, 2003.
- 428-435
- Broiler
- Chloride
- Dietary electrolyte balance
- Heat stress
- Sodium
- Gallus gallus
- Glycine max
- Zea mays
- ammonium chloride
- bicarbonate
- chloride
- electrolyte
- potassium bicarbonate
- potassium derivative
- animal
- chicken
- diet
- eating
- energy metabolism
- heat
- humidity
- maize
- male
- pH
- physiology
- potassium intake
- regression analysis
- sodium intake
- soybean
- stress
- weight gain
- Ammonium Chloride
- Animals
- Bicarbonates
- Chickens
- Chlorides
- Diet
- Eating
- Electrolytes
- Energy Metabolism
- Heat
- Humidity
- Hydrogen-Ion Concentration
- Male
- Potassium Compounds
- Potassium, Dietary
- Regression Analysis
- Sodium Bicarbonate
- Sodium, Dietary
- Soybeans
- Stress
- Weight Gain
- http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ps/82.3.428
- Acesso restrito
- outro
- http://repositorio.unesp.br/handle/11449/67204
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