Sn. Nahashon et al., PRODUCTION VARIABLES AND NUTRIENT RETENTION IN SINGLE COMB WHITE LEGHORN LAYING PULLETS FED DIETS SUPPLEMENTED WITH DIRECT-FED MICROBIALS, Poultry science, 73(11), 1994, pp. 1699-1711
Two experiments were carried out for six and seven 28-d periods, respe
ctively, with DeKalb XL Single Comb White Leghorn laying pullets to as
certain the effect of feeding 1,100 mg Lactobacillus (Lacto)/kg diet (
ppm) and 2,200 ppm Lacto diets, and the supplementation of these diets
with 1 and 3% fat, on layer performance and nitrogen, calcium, and ph
osphorus retention. The dietary treatments were corn-soybean meal (C-S
) control, C-S plus condensed cane molasses solubles (CCMS)-1,100 ppm
Lacto (4.4 x 10(7) cfu/mg Lacto), and C-S plus CCMS-2,200 ppm Lacto (8
.8 x 10(7) cfu/mg Lacto) without fat (Experiment 1) and without and wi
th 1 and 3% supplemental fat to each Lacto level (Experiment 2). In bo
th experiments, layers fed the 1,100 ppm Lacto diets had better (P<.05
) hen-day production, daily feed consumption, egg mass, egg weight, eg
g size, and feed conversion than layers fed diets without Lacto. Egg m
ass, interior egg quality, and feed conversion (Experiment 1), mean bo
dy weight gains, and nitrogen, calcium, and phosphorus retention (Expe
riment 2) were further improved (P<.05) with feeding 2,200 ppm Lacto d
iets. Feeding Lacto diets with 1% fat provided (P<.05) larger eggs and
better (P<.05) nitrogen and phosphorus retention, whereas 3% fat decr
eased (P<.05) feed consumption and nutrient retention and improved (P<
.05) feed conversion and body weight gain. Positive correlations betwe
en Lacto diets and nitrogen and calcium retentions, daily feed consump
tion, and egg size were observed. Feeding 1,100 ppm Lacto diets to lay
ers stimulated appetite and improved egg production, egg mass, egg wei
ght, egg size, and feed conversion. Addition of fat to Lacto diets red
uced daily feed consumption and provided better feed conversion, egg m
asses, egg sizes, body weight gains, and nutrient retentions.