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Effect of feeding different levels of sugar beet pulp on weaning piglets

Proper amounts of sugar beet pulp in weanling diets may improve post-weaning performance.

15 March 2016
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Dietary fibre in weanling diets may be a concern, because young pigs have a limited capacity to digest fibre. Still, those limits are not well established. The paradigm that young pigs eating high fibrous diets cannot maintain feed intake might be dependent on fibre type and requires validation to maximise opportunities to use fibrous feedstuffs. The effects of increasing inclusion of sugar beet pulp (SBP) by substituting wheat grain on diet nutrient digestibility and growth performance of young pigs were evaluated. In total, 220 pigs (initial body weight 7.5 kg) were fed Phase 1 diets for 2 weeks (day 1–14) starting 1 week after weaning at 19 days of age and sequentially Phase 2 diets for 3 weeks (day 15–35). Five pelleted wheat-based diets including 0, 60, 120, 180 and 240 g SBP/kg were fed. The SBP contained (as-fed) 90 g crude protein (CP) and 249 g acid detergent fibre (ADF)/kg. Phase 1 and 2 diets were formulated to provide 9.6 and 9.4 MJ NE/kg and 1.3 and 1.2 g standardised ileal digestible (SID) Lys/MJ NE, respectively. Diets were balanced for NE by increasing canola oil from 5 to 50 g/kg for Phase 1 and 2 diets and for AA by increasing crystalline AA.

Increasing dietary inclusion of SBP up to 240 g/kg increased ADF content of diets to 101 g/kg, linearly reduced (P < 0.001) apparent total tract digestibility coefficient (CATTD) of gross energy (GE) by 0.04 and of CP by 0.08 feeding Phase 1 diets, quadratically reduced (P < 0.001) CATTD of GE by 0.01 and linearly reduced (P < 0.001) CATTD of CP by 0.06 feeding Phase 2 diets. Increasing inclusion of SBP up to 240 g/kg linearly reduced (P < 0.001) calculated diet NE value by 0.35 MJ/kg in Phase 1 and quadratically increased (P < 0.001) calculated diet NE value by 0.29 MJ/kg in Phase 2. Increasing inclusion of SBP quadratically reduced ADFI (P < 0.05) for day 29–35 and linearly reduced average daily gain (ADG; P < 0.05) for day 15–35. The G:F was linearly increased (P < 0.05) for day 1–7, linearly reduced (P = 0.01) for day 15–21 and quadratically reduced (P < 0.05) for day 15–28. Overall (day 1–35), increasing dietary inclusion of SBP up to 240 g/kg linearly reduced (P < 0.05) ADFI and ADG by 46 g/d, quadratically reduced (P < 0.01) G:F and linearly reduced (P < 0.05) final BW at day 35 by 1.1 kg. However, growth performance did not differ (P > 0.05) between pigs fed diets containing 0 or 60 g SBP/kg.

In conclusion, dietary inclusion of 60 g SBP/kg did not compromise growth performance of weaned pigs. These pigs maintained ADFI, ADG and G:F with diets containing as much as 65 g ADF/kg, but could not maintain growth performance for diets containing up to 101 g ADF/kg.

Wang, L. F., Beltranena, E., & Zijlstra, R. T. (2016). Diet nutrient digestibility and growth performance of weaned pigs fed sugar beet pulp. Animal Feed Science and Technology, 211, 145-152.

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