Nutritional guide to feeding wheat and wheat co-products to swine: a review

IF 1.3 Q3 AGRICULTURE, DAIRY & ANIMAL SCIENCE Translational Animal Science Pub Date : 2024-07-16 DOI:10.1093/tas/txae106
Ethan B. Stas, J. DeRouchey, R. Goodband, M. Tokach, J. Woodworth, J. Gebhardt
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Abstract

Inclusion of wheat grain can offer feeding opportunities in swine diets because of its high starch, crude protein (CP), amino acid (AA), and phosphorus (P) content. High concentrations of starch within wheat grain makes it a good energy source for swine. Mean energy content of wheat was 4,900 and 3,785 kcal/kg DM for digestible energy and metabolizable energy, respectively. Crude protein concentration can vary based on the class of wheat which include hard red winter, hard red spring, soft red winter, hard white, soft white, and durum. The average CP of all wheat data collected in this review was 12.6% with a range of 8.5 to 17.6%. The AA concentration of wheat increases with increasing CP with the mean Lys content of 0.38% with a standardized ileal digestibility (SID) of 76.8%. As CP of wheat increases, the SID of AA in wheat also increases. Mean P of wheat was 0.27% and median P was 0.30%. Off-quality wheat is often associated with sprouts, low-test weight, or mycotoxin-contamination. Sprouted and low-test weight wheat are physical abnormalities associated with decreased starch within wheat kernel that leads to reductions in energy. The assumed energy value of wheat grain may need to be reduced by up to 10% when the proportion of sprouted to non-sprouted wheat is up to 40% whereas above 40%, wheat’s energy may need to be reduced by 15 to 20%. Low-test weight wheat appears to not influence pig performance unless it falls below 644 kg/m3 and then energy value should be decreased by 5% compared to normal wheat. Deoxynivalenol (DON) contamination is most common with wheat grain. When content is above the guidance level of 1 mg/kg of DON in the complete diet, each 1 mg/kg increase in a DON contaminated wheat-based diet will result in a 11 and 6% reduction in ADG and ADFI for nursery pigs, and a 2.7 and 2.6% reduction in ADG and ADFI, in finishing pigs, respectively. Wheat co-products are produced from the flour milling industry. Wheat co-products include wheat bran middlings, millrun, shorts, and red dog. Wheat co-products can be used in swine diets, but application may change because of differences in the final diet energy concentration due to changes in the starch and fiber levels of each wheat co-product. However, feeding wheat co-products are being evaluated to improve digestive health. Overall, wheat and wheat co-products can be fed in all stages of production if energy and other nutrient characteristics are considered.
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猪饲喂小麦和小麦副产品的营养指南:综述
由于小麦粒的淀粉、粗蛋白 (CP)、氨基酸 (AA) 和磷 (P) 含量较高,因此在猪日粮中添加小麦粒可提供饲喂机会。小麦粒中的高浓度淀粉使其成为猪的良好能量来源。小麦可消化能和代谢能的平均能量含量分别为 4,900 千卡/千克 DM 和 3,785 千卡/千克 DM。粗蛋白浓度会因小麦种类的不同而变化,包括硬红冬小麦、硬红春小麦、软红冬小麦、硬白小麦、软白小麦和硬质小麦。本研究收集的所有小麦数据的平均 CP 为 12.6%,范围在 8.5 至 17.6%之间。小麦的 AA 浓度随着 CP 的增加而增加,平均赖氨酸含量为 0.38%,标准化回肠消化率(SID)为 76.8%。随着小麦 CP 的增加,小麦中 AA 的 SID 也随之增加。小麦的平均 P 值为 0.27%,中位 P 值为 0.30%。劣质小麦通常与发芽、低检验重量或霉菌毒素污染有关。发芽小麦和低检测重量小麦是与小麦籽粒内淀粉减少有关的物理异常现象,会导致能量降低。当发芽小麦与非发芽小麦的比例达到 40% 时,小麦谷物的假定能量值可能需要降低 10%,而超过 40%,小麦的能量可能需要降低 15% 至 20%。低试验重小麦似乎不会影响猪的生产性能,除非其重量低于 644 kg/m3,此时能量值应比普通小麦降低 5%。脱氧雪腐镰刀菌烯醇 (DON) 污染在小麦谷物中最为常见。当全日粮中 DON 的含量超过 1 毫克/千克的指导水平时,受 DON 污染的小麦日粮每增加 1 毫克/千克,保育猪的 ADG 和 ADFI 将分别降低 11% 和 6%,育成猪的 ADG 和 ADFI 将分别降低 2.7% 和 2.6%。小麦副产品产自面粉加工业。小麦副产品包括麦麸中筋、磨碎、短粒和红狗肉。小麦副产品可用于猪日粮中,但由于每种小麦副产品中淀粉和纤维含量的变化导致最终日粮能量浓度的不同,因此其应用可能会发生变化。不过,正在对饲喂小麦副产品以改善消化系统健康进行评估。总之,如果考虑到能量和其他营养特性,小麦和小麦副产品可以在生产的各个阶段饲喂。
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来源期刊
Translational Animal Science
Translational Animal Science Veterinary-Veterinary (all)
CiteScore
2.80
自引率
15.40%
发文量
149
审稿时长
8 weeks
期刊介绍: Translational Animal Science (TAS) is the first open access-open review animal science journal, encompassing a broad scope of research topics in animal science. TAS focuses on translating basic science to innovation, and validation of these innovations by various segments of the allied animal industry. Readers of TAS will typically represent education, industry, and government, including research, teaching, administration, extension, management, quality assurance, product development, and technical services. Those interested in TAS typically include animal breeders, economists, embryologists, engineers, food scientists, geneticists, microbiologists, nutritionists, veterinarians, physiologists, processors, public health professionals, and others with an interest in animal production and applied aspects of animal sciences.
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