scholarly journals The effect on mice of practical diets containing different protein and energy levels

1983 ◽  
Vol 17 (4) ◽  
pp. 336-339
Author(s):  
D. J. Ford ◽  
R. J. Ward

Mice of 2 strains were fed diets of natural ingredients in 3 different laboratories. The diets, which were fed before and after pelleting, contained levels of protein and energy within the ranges comparable to those found in existing laboratory diets and were the same formulation as those fed to rats in a previous paper. The diet with the lowest energy level supported the lowest rate of bodyweight gain, as it had with rats. Little effect was noticed on food consumption, conversion efficiency or water intake. Animals fed the pelleted diets gained bodyweight faster and there were indications of greater food and water consumption and also food conversion efficiency. It was concluded that food intake was improved with the pelleted diets resulting in the other increases.

1987 ◽  
Vol 45 (2) ◽  
pp. 239-260 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. L. Thonney ◽  
St C. S. Taylor ◽  
T. H. McClelland

ABSTRACTGenetic size-scaling accounts for most of the variation found among mammalian species in food intake and growth rate, with food conversion efficiency independent of the body size of the species. Is the same true of breeds and strains within species?Animals from Soay, Welsh Mountain, Southdown, Finish Landrace, Jacob, Wiltshire Horn and Oxford Down sheep breeds and from a breed of feral goats were grown to 0·40, 0·52, 0·64 or 0·76 of the mean mature weight of their breed and sex. Food was offered ad libitum and individually recorded.Allometric growth coefficients were obtained for fleece weight, femur weight and femur length. Fleece was late maturing and femur early.Breed and sex size-scaling coefficients, obtained by regression of breed and sex means on mature size, were similar to those found at the species level for age from conception to slaughter, time taken to mature and food conversion efficiency. Coefficients were higher than expected for total and daily food consumption, especially at early stages of maturity. Most breed coefficients were close to expectation while sex coefficients were somewhat higher than expected.There were significant breed deviations: Welsh Mountain, Oxford Down and probably Soay sheep required less time and Jacob sheep and feral goats required more time to mature than expected from differences in mature size. Soay and Welsh Mountain sheep appeared to be more efficient and feral goats and Jacob sheep less efficient food converters over the same maturity interval.


1983 ◽  
Vol 17 (4) ◽  
pp. 330-335 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. J. Ford ◽  
R. J. Ward

Rats of 3 strains were fed diets of natural ingredients in 4 different laboratories. The diets contained different levels of protein and energy within ranges comparable to those found in existing laboratory diets. Energy level over the range examined appeared to exert greatest influence on bodyweight gain, but had no effect on food intake. The diet with the highest amino acid content was consumed in smaller amounts than the other diets. Food utilization was less efficient in the lower energy diets. Fat deposition was reduced in animals fed the lowest energy diet. It is concluded that energy level of the diet exerts an effect on the rate of bodyweight gain in rats, but that for longer-term studies a reduced energy level may be beneficial by leading to smaller fat deposits with consequent increase in longevity.


1965 ◽  
Vol 22 (6) ◽  
pp. 1379-1386 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. L. Gross ◽  
E. W. Roelofs ◽  
P. O. Fromm

Four 6-week experiments were conducted to evaluate the effect of photoperiod on growth (total length and weight), food consumption, and food conversion efficiency by green sunfish. Fish were held at constant temperatures in light-tight aquaria under four photoperiods (8-hr constant; 16-hr constant; variable, increasing from 8 to 16 hr; and variable, decreasing from 16 to 8 hr).Growth, food consumption, and food conversion efficiency were all influenced by photoperiod. Food consumption varied directly with the amount of light to which fish were exposed. Fish growth and food conversion efficiency were closely correlated and were generally highest in the increasing, lowest in the decreasing, and intermediate in the two constant photoperiods, but higher in the longer daylength. The results suggest that photoperiod influences growth through increasing conversion efficiency and also possibly through stimulating food consumption.Varying daylength exerts a greater influence on fish growth than a constant daylength. Increasing photoperiod stimulates growth and decreasing photoperiod inhibits growth. This result suggests that the lack of growth of warmwater fish in fall when water temperatures and average daylength correspond to those of spring is largely due to the influence of decreasing daylength.


Author(s):  
H.J. Black ◽  
D.M.B. Chestnutt

It has been clearly established that shearing ewes during pregnancy increases lamb birthweight (Austin and Young, 1971; Rutter, Laird and Broadbent, 1971; Black and Chestnutt, 1990). Fewer studies have examined the response of fattening lambs to shearing although both Salman and Owen (1981) and Marai, Nowar and Bahgat (1987) noted a significant increase in growth rate. This was accompanied by an increase in voluntary food intake and consequently little change in the food conversion efficiency.The objective of these experiments was to study the influence of shearing on voluntary food intake and growth rate of fattening lambs offered various levels of concentrate feeding plus ad libitum forage.


1994 ◽  
Vol 58 (2) ◽  
pp. 285-289 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. B. Salawut ◽  
S. K. Adedeji ◽  
W. H. Hassan

AbstractExperiments were carried out to establish the suitability of full fat neem seed meal (FFNSM) in broiler and growing rabbit diets. In the broiler experiment, 200-day-old (Babcock) broiler chicks were used in a 10-week trial, with the FFNSM fixed at 0 (control), 25, 50, 75 and 100 g/kg diet. In the rabbit experiment 24 rabbits of three different breeds were used in an 8-week trial, with the FFNSM fixed at 0 (control), 100, 200 and 300 g/kg diet. The criteria of response were food intake, weight gain, food conversion and protein efficiency ratio and mortality. There was a significant (P < 0·05) negative correlation between the dietary inclusion of FFNSM, weight gain and food conversion efficiency of the birds in the starter phase. In the finisher phase from 5 to 10 weeks, food intake, weight gain, food conversion and protein efficiency ratio did not differ significantly (P > 0·05) between the birds on the control diet and diets containing up to 75 g FFNSM per kg. For all the measurements, rabbits on the diet with 100 g FFNSM per kg gave better results than the control. Food intake, weight gain, food conversion efficiency and protein efficiency ratio did not differ significantly (P > 0·05) between rabbits on control diet and the diet containing 200 g FFNSM per kg. Performance on the diet with 300 g FFNSM per kg was poorest.


1956 ◽  
Vol 48 (2) ◽  
pp. 220-234 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Smith ◽  
I. A. M. Lucas

1. The pigs in the three experiments reported were weaned at 10 days old and fed water and drymeal diets ad libitum until they reached 25 lb. live weight. They were housed individually in cages and records were kept of each pig's food consumption and of its live weight every third day.2. Most of the diets fed were based on roller-dried skim milk, rolled oat groats, white fishmeal, sucrose, dried yeast, cod-liver oil, minerals and antibiotic.3. Forty-eight pigs were used in Exp. 1, which was designed as a 4 × 2 factorial. Food-conversion efficiency was significantly improved by 10% when the crude protein in the diet was raised from 24 to 29%. Increasing the protein to 34 or 39% brought no further significant improvement. There were no significant differences between growth rates which were attributable to the four levels of protein.The inclusion of 10% sucrose in the diet did not result in increased food consumption, but there were significant improvements of 8% in growth rate and 10% in food conversion efficiency. There were no treatment interactions.4. Twenty-four pigs were used in Exp. 2, which was designed as a 2 × 2 factorial. Figs fed a diet containing 7% fat grew 4% faster and 6% more efficiently than others fed a diet containing 3·7% fat, but neither difference approached statistical significance. There was no advantage in feeding the meal as a slop, indeed, there was a tendency for the pigs to scour more than on dry feeding. As in Exp. 1 there was no treatment interaction.5. Forty-eight pigs were used in Exp. 3, which was designed as a 2 × 2 × 2 factorial. The basal diet contained about 30% crude protein and 10% sucrose.An increase in the antibiotic level from 18 to 112 mg./lb. diet significantly increased growth rate by 7%, but the 9% increase in efficiency of food conversion was not statistically significant.The addition of a trace mineral supplement significantly improved rate of gain by 7%, but the 6% increase in efficiency of food conversion was not statistically significant.The addition of a complex vitamin mixture had no significant effect upon either rate or efficiency of growth.6. In all three experiments the shape of the growth curve of pigs weaned at 10 days old wag divided into two periods. During the initial ‘check period’, lasting about 10 days, the pigs ate only small amounts of food, grew very slowly, and sometimes scoured. After the ‘check period’ there was a sudden change to the ‘growing period’, during which the pigs ate increasing amounts of meal and grew rapidly.The only treatment which significantly affected the length of the check period was in Exp. 3, when the addition of the vitamin supplement to a diet containing a high antibiotic level shortened the check period by 3 days but then counteracted this advantage by reducing rate of gain during the growing period.7. Between 25 lb. weight and 8 weeks of age twenty-four pigs from the experiments reported were fed ad libitum on a dry-meal diet containing 22% crude protein. The average live weight of these pigs at 8 weeks was 49 lb.


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