Lysine requirement of weaned piglets

IF 4 2区 农林科学 Q1 AGRICULTURE, DAIRY & ANIMAL SCIENCE Animal Pub Date : 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1016/j.animal.2024.101323
S. Goethals , P. Bikker , J.H.M. Rijpert , B. Ampe , J.W. Spek , S. Millet
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Abstract

Lysine, often referred to as the ‘first limiting amino acid’ in pig nutrition, plays a pivotal role in growth performance. Variability in lysine requirements arises due to factors such as age, sex and environmental conditions. Optimising pig health and production efficiency and minimising nitrogen excretion require accurate knowledge of estimated lysine requirements accounting for factors such as genetics, feeding practices, scientific advancements, and environmental considerations. This study aimed to determine standardised ileal digestible (SID) lysine requirements of weaned piglets (5–30 kg) based on a literature review using meta-analytical approaches. The literature review yielded 344 studies that were screened for title and abstract. In total, 41 experiments met the inclusion criteria, resulting in a dataset of 206 treatment means. Linear, quadratic and linear-plateau models were used to gain insight into the effect of SID lysine addition on average daily gain and feed efficiency for the combined dataset and separately for the individual experiments. Regression analysis showed a predominant linear increase in average daily gain and feed efficiency as an overall response to increasing lysine levels across both the combined dataset and individual experiments. Breakpoint estimation from the linear-plateau models was inconclusive, indicating that the optimal SID lysine requirement to maximise piglet growth performance likely exceeded the upper lysine levels tested in most studies, thus surpassing 1.3 g SID lysine per MJ net energy. This review indicates high values for the lysine requirement to achieve maximum growth performance. Results may suggest that piglet feed formulation should focus on an optimal dietary SID lysine to CP ratio, rather than SID lysine per kg of diet or unit of net energy. However, more research is needed to investigate this suggestion.
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断奶仔猪赖氨酸需要量。
赖氨酸通常被称为猪营养中的“第一限制性氨基酸”,在生长性能中起着关键作用。赖氨酸需求的变化是由年龄、性别和环境条件等因素引起的。优化猪的健康和生产效率,最大限度地减少氮排泄,需要准确了解估计赖氨酸需求,考虑到遗传、饲养方法、科学进步和环境考虑等因素。本研究旨在通过荟萃分析方法,在文献综述的基础上确定断奶仔猪(5-30 kg)的标准化回肠可消化赖氨酸需要量。文献综述产生了344项研究,对标题和摘要进行了筛选。总共有41个实验符合纳入标准,得到206个处理方法的数据集。采用线性、二次和线性平台模型,对组合数据集和单独实验分别研究SID赖氨酸添加对平均日增重和饲料效率的影响。回归分析显示,在组合数据集和单个实验中,平均日增重和饲料效率的总体响应是赖氨酸水平的提高。线性平台模型的断点估计不确定,表明最大化仔猪生长性能的最佳SID赖氨酸需取量可能超过大多数研究中测试的赖氨酸上限水平,从而超过每MJ净能量1.3 g SID赖氨酸。这一综述表明,为了达到最大的生长性能,赖氨酸的需要量很高。由此可见,仔猪饲料配方应以饲粮中最佳SID赖氨酸/粗蛋白质比为重点,而不是以每千克饲粮中SID赖氨酸或单位净能量为重点。然而,需要更多的研究来调查这一建议。
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来源期刊
Animal
Animal 农林科学-奶制品与动物科学
CiteScore
7.50
自引率
2.80%
发文量
246
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: Editorial board animal attracts the best research in animal biology and animal systems from across the spectrum of the agricultural, biomedical, and environmental sciences. It is the central element in an exciting collaboration between the British Society of Animal Science (BSAS), Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA) and the European Federation of Animal Science (EAAP) and represents a merging of three scientific journals: Animal Science; Animal Research; Reproduction, Nutrition, Development. animal publishes original cutting-edge research, ''hot'' topics and horizon-scanning reviews on animal-related aspects of the life sciences at the molecular, cellular, organ, whole animal and production system levels. The main subject areas include: breeding and genetics; nutrition; physiology and functional biology of systems; behaviour, health and welfare; farming systems, environmental impact and climate change; product quality, human health and well-being. Animal models and papers dealing with the integration of research between these topics and their impact on the environment and people are particularly welcome.
期刊最新文献
Editorial Board Editorial Board Review: Will “cultured meat” transform our food system towards more sustainability? Environmental trade-offs of meeting nutritional requirements with a lower share of animal protein for adult subpopulations Review: Livestock cell types with myogenic differentiation potential: Considerations for the development of cultured meat
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