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    Effect of xylanase and beta-glucanase on growth performance and nutrient digestibility in piglets fed wheat-barley-based diets

    There is increasing interest in the use of exogenous enzymes to improve diet digestibility and performance of pigs fed mixed grain-based diets. The potential of combination of carbohydrase (xylanase and Ô-glucanase) to enhance nutrient digestibility and performance was examined in the present study using 160 crossbred pigs (LandraceÎLarge White) of initial mean BW of 7.4 kg. Pigs were randomly assigned to four dietary treatments with 4 pigs per pen and 10 pens per diet for a 42-d feeding period. The diets were: Control (T1, 92% of DE requirement of NRC, 1998, with no enzymes), and control plus carbohydrase combination. The enzyme was added at 50 (T2), 100 (T3) and 200 g/MT (T4). Celite was used as an indigestible marker and feed was available to pigs ad libitum. Pigs were weighed at 0, 3 and 6 weeks of the experiment and fecal samples were collected for 3 days at the end of week 5. On average, piglets grew 525 g/d, consumed 845 g/d, and exhibited mean FCR of 1.59. Weight gain and feed intake did not differ (PN0.05) among treatments, however, FCR for the overall period was better (Pb0.05) for pigs fed diets supplemented with 200 g/MT enzyme compared with those fed the control diet. The FCR for the overall period were 1.66, 1.59, 1.60 and 1.57 (SE=0.07) for T1, T2, T3 and T4, respectively. Faecal digestibility of energy and protein did not differ (PN0.05) among treatments, however improvement in performance was observed, suggesting improved nutrient absorption in the ileum. Digestibility of NSP and of some individual sugars (arabinose, xylose, mannose and glucose) numerically increased (PN0.05) with enzyme supplemented diets relative to the control. The digestibility of NSP improved by 2.7 to 5.6% in the carbohydrase-supplemented compared to the control diet. It can be concluded that adding a specific proportions of blend of exogenous xylanase and Ô-glucanase enzymes to mixed grain-based diets improved performance in weaned pigs.
    Document information
    Product / service: Carbohydrases and Proteases
    Publication date: 01/01/2010
    Species: Pig
    Authors: Owusu-Asiedu A, Simmins PH, Brufau J, Lizardo R, Peron A
    Doctype: Publications & Citations
    Publication / conference: Livestock Science, volume 134
    Regions and countries: Global
    Keywords: absorption, ad, libitum, arabinose, bw, carbohydrase, combination, control, crossbred, de, diet, dietary, diets, digestibilities, digestibility, energy, enzyme, enzymes, exogenous, faecal, fcr, fecal, feed, intake, feeding, gain, glucose, growth, performance, ileum, mannose, marker, nsp, nutrient, per, pig, piglet, piglets, pigs, protein, requirement, samples, sugar, sugars, t3, t4, treatment, weaned, weight, xylanase, xylose
    Production challenge(s): Gut health
    Diets: Barley/Oats, Wheat, rye & triticale, Wheat, rye and tricale containing by-products
    Brands: Axtra® AB, Porzyme® 9300, Porcheck, Porzyme® 9100
    Resource ref: 11264
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