Camelina cake (CAM) is a co-product proposed as an alternative protein source; however, piglet data are still limited. This study aimed to evaluate the effect of different doses of CAM in substitution of soyabean meal on the growth, health and gut health of weaned pigs. At 14 d post-weaning (d0), sixty-four piglets were assigned either to a standard diet or to a diet with 4 %, 8 % or 12 % of CAM. Piglets were weighed weekly. At d7 and d28, faeces were collected for microbiota and polyamine and blood for reactive oxygen metabolites (ROM) and thyroxine analysis. At d28, pigs were slaughtered, organs were weighed, pH was recorded on gut, colon was analysed for volatile fatty acids (VFA) and jejunum was used for morphological and gene expression analysis. Data analysis was carried out using a mixed model including diet, pen and litter as factors; linear and quadratic contrasts were tested. CAM linearly reduced the average daily gain from d0-d7, d0-d14, d0-d21 and d0-d28 (P <= 001). From d0-d7 increasing CAM linearly decreased feed intake (P = 004) and increased linearly the feed to gain (P = 0004). CAM increased linearly the liver weight (P < 00001) and affected the cadaverine (P < 0001). The diet did not affect the ROM, thyroxine, intestinal pH, VFA and morphology. All doses of CAM increased the alpha diversity indices at d28 (P < 005). CAM at 4 % promoted the abundance of Butyricicoccaceae_UCG-008. Feeding with CAM enhanced resilience in the gut microbiome and can be evaluated as a potential alternative protein source with dose-dependent limitations on piglet growth performance.
Luise D., Correa F., Cestonaro G., Sattin E., Mele M., Conte G., et al. (2024). Effect of different doses of camelina cake inclusion as a substitute of dietary soybean meal on growth performance and gut health of weaned pigs. BRITISH JOURNAL OF NUTRITION, 131(12), 1962-1974 [10.1017/S0007114524000722].
Effect of different doses of camelina cake inclusion as a substitute of dietary soybean meal on growth performance and gut health of weaned pigs
Luise D.Primo
Investigation
;Correa F.Secondo
Investigation
;Virdis S.;Negrini C.;Stefanelli C.Investigation
;Mazzoni M.;Trevisi P.
Co-ultimo
Investigation
;
2024
Abstract
Camelina cake (CAM) is a co-product proposed as an alternative protein source; however, piglet data are still limited. This study aimed to evaluate the effect of different doses of CAM in substitution of soyabean meal on the growth, health and gut health of weaned pigs. At 14 d post-weaning (d0), sixty-four piglets were assigned either to a standard diet or to a diet with 4 %, 8 % or 12 % of CAM. Piglets were weighed weekly. At d7 and d28, faeces were collected for microbiota and polyamine and blood for reactive oxygen metabolites (ROM) and thyroxine analysis. At d28, pigs were slaughtered, organs were weighed, pH was recorded on gut, colon was analysed for volatile fatty acids (VFA) and jejunum was used for morphological and gene expression analysis. Data analysis was carried out using a mixed model including diet, pen and litter as factors; linear and quadratic contrasts were tested. CAM linearly reduced the average daily gain from d0-d7, d0-d14, d0-d21 and d0-d28 (P <= 001). From d0-d7 increasing CAM linearly decreased feed intake (P = 004) and increased linearly the feed to gain (P = 0004). CAM increased linearly the liver weight (P < 00001) and affected the cadaverine (P < 0001). The diet did not affect the ROM, thyroxine, intestinal pH, VFA and morphology. All doses of CAM increased the alpha diversity indices at d28 (P < 005). CAM at 4 % promoted the abundance of Butyricicoccaceae_UCG-008. Feeding with CAM enhanced resilience in the gut microbiome and can be evaluated as a potential alternative protein source with dose-dependent limitations on piglet growth performance.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
---|---|---|---|
h_11585_994936.pdf
accesso aperto
Tipo:
Versione (PDF) editoriale
Licenza:
Licenza per Accesso Aperto. Creative Commons Attribuzione (CCBY)
Dimensione
709.23 kB
Formato
Adobe PDF
|
709.23 kB | Adobe PDF | Visualizza/Apri |
S0007114524000722sup001.docx
accesso aperto
Tipo:
File Supplementare
Licenza:
Licenza per Accesso Aperto. Creative Commons Attribuzione (CCBY)
Dimensione
7.55 MB
Formato
Microsoft Word XML
|
7.55 MB | Microsoft Word XML | Visualizza/Apri |
I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.