EFFICACY OF HYDRATED SODIUM-CALCIUM ALUMINOSILICATE, SCREENING AND DILUTION IN REDUCING THE EFFECTS OF MOLD CONTAMINATED CORN IN PIGS

Citation
R. Patterson et Lg. Young, EFFICACY OF HYDRATED SODIUM-CALCIUM ALUMINOSILICATE, SCREENING AND DILUTION IN REDUCING THE EFFECTS OF MOLD CONTAMINATED CORN IN PIGS, Canadian journal of animal science, 73(3), 1993, pp. 615-624
Citations number
25
Categorie Soggetti
Agriculture Dairy & AnumalScience
ISSN journal
00083984
Volume
73
Issue
3
Year of publication
1993
Pages
615 - 624
Database
ISI
SICI code
0008-3984(1993)73:3<615:EOHSAS>2.0.ZU;2-Y
Abstract
Corn naturally contaminated with deoxynivalenol (DON) (approximately 1 5 mg DON kg-1 corn) replaced uncontaminated corn in corn-soybean meal diets fed ad libitum to piglets in a series of short-term trials. In a preliminary trial, inclusion of 72 % mold-contaminated corn in a diet caused a severe reduction in growth rate. In trial two, 0.5% hydrated sodium calcium aluminosilicate (HSCAS) was added to diets containing 50% and 25% contaminated corn. In trial three, 1% HSCAS was added to d iets containing 50 and 25 % contaminated corn. Trial four involved scr eening contaminated corn and incorporating the screened corn into a di et. Feed intake and gain-to-feed ratio were not reliable criteria due to excessive feed wastage by some pigs fed diets containing contaminat ed corn. The addition of HSCAS at either 0.5 or 1% did not influence a verage daily gain (ADG) of the pigs in these trials (P > 0.05). Screen ing did not improve ADG (P > 0.05) nor did it appreciably reduce the l evel of DON. In a sieving study, contaminated corn on the smallest scr eens had the highest DON levels but these screens removed only a small portion of the initial sample. Decreasing the level of the contaminat ed corn in the diets from 72 to 25% improved ADG (P < 0.05). Dilution of contaminated corn with uncontaminated corn was the only effective m ethod of reducing the effect of DON in these trials.