Apparent digestible phosphorus in the feeding of pigs in relation to availability, requirement and environment. 1. Digestible phosphorus in feedstuffs from plant and animal origin.

Authors

  • A.W. Jongbloed
  • P.A. Kemme

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18174/njas.v38i3B.16579

Abstract

The digestibility of phosphorus in 15 feeds from plant sources and 8 from animal sources were studied using the total faeces collection technique in 75 trials with pigs 45 to 110 kg in order to match P availability to requirement and thereby reducing excess excretion and hence environmental pollution. Results show that P digestibility in feeds of plant origin varies substantially. For maize, maize byproducts, rice bran and sunflower seed meal P digestibility was low, varying from 10 to 20%. P digestibility of barley, beans (Phaseolus spp.) and soyabean meal solvent extracted ranged from 37 to 39% and dehulled and non-dehulled soyabean meal gave similar results. The highest P digestibility was obtained for wheat and peas, 47 and 45%, respectively. Differences in P digestibility can be explained by the proportion of phytate P and the presence of phytase. P digestibility in feeds of animal origin was high, ranging from 68 to 91%. Differences in P digestibility may be due to differences in technological treatment or physico-chemical structure of the products. (Abstract retrieved from CAB Abstracts by CABI’s permission)

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Published

1990-09-01

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Section

Papers