Author:
GARNSWORTHY P. C.,WISEMAN J.,FEGEROS K.
Abstract
Near infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) is widely used in the flour milling industry for rapid determination
of moisture and protein in wheat. However, these measurements give little indication of the nutritive
value of wheat when fed to poultry or pigs. Accurate estimates of nutritive value require specialist
facilities and are time-consuming and costly. Accordingly, prediction from chemical or NIRS
measurements would be of some considerable benefit. In the current study 160 samples of wheat,
representing 24 different varieties, were used to generate NIRS calibration equations for chemical,
nutritive and agronomic characteristics. Predictions of chemical constituents in wheat were very
accurate. Coefficients of determination (r2) were 0·94 for dry matter, 0·90 for crude protein, 0·97 for
ash, 0·78 for starch and 0·98 for oil. True metabolizable energy in broiler chickens was predicted more
accurately (r2 = 0·52 for adult birds, 0·74 for young birds) than apparent metabolizable energy (r2 = 0·45). Digestible energy (r2 = 0·17) and nitrogen digestibility (r = 0·22) in pigs were not predicted
very accurately on a smaller subset (n = 33). Agronomic characteristics were predicted very
accurately (r2 = 0·98 hardness, 0·80 bushel weight, 0·99 thousand-grain weight). Predictions of
nutritive value of wheat from chemical or agronomic characteristics are very inaccurate, since
coefficients of determination vary from zero to 0·25. It is concluded that NIRS can accurately estimate
the chemical composition of wheat, but accurate prediction of nutritive value is reduced by animal
variation. Nevertheless, NIRS is potentially more reliable for assessing nutritive value than chemical
composition or agronomic characteristics.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Genetics,Agronomy and Crop Science,Animal Science and Zoology
Cited by
68 articles.
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