Author:
PRADHAN SANJAY K,VARSHNEY NITIN,KHARADI V B,CHAUDHARY S R,KUMAR B
Abstract
An experiment was conducted to study the effect of dietary boron supplementation on performance and mineral metabolism in broilers fed a diet with optimal or sub-optimal levels of calcium. A total of 216 one-day old broiler chicks (Vencob) of mixed sex (mean BW 43.79±0.83 g) were distributed in completely randomized design into six treatments each with three replicates of 12 birds (6 of each sex). The six dietary treatment groups comprised of B0C0 (basal diet with normal calcium (10 g Ca/kg)), B0C1 (Basal diet of 20% calcium deficiency (8 g Ca/kg)), B0C2 (Basal diet of 40% calcium deficiency (6 g Ca/kg)), B1C0 (Basal diet with normal calcium + 25 mg/kg boron), B1C1 (Basal diet of 20% calcium deficiency + 25 mg/kg boron) and B1C2 (Basal diet of 40% calcium deficiency + 25 mg/kg boron). The performance indices like body weight (BW), weekly body weight gain, feed intake (FI) and feed conversion ratio (FCR) were recorded till 42 d of age. A metabolism trial was conducted at the end to determine the balance of minerals. Lower than the recommended level of calcium alone or with supplemental boron significantly increased the BW, feed intake, and FCR in commercial broilers at six weeks of age. Low dietary calcium significantly increased the retention of calcium, phosphorous, magnesium, iron and manganese. Dietary boron supplementation significantly increased the excreta concentration of iron and manganese. However, the absolute and relative retention of manganese and iron were unaffected when boron was supplemented into a low calcium diet; indicating the negative effect of boron on manganese, and iron metabolism can be compensated by low dietary Ca concentration.
Publisher
Indian Council of Agricultural Research, Directorate of Knowledge Management in Agriculture
Subject
General Veterinary,Animal Science and Zoology
Reference60 articles.
1. AOAC. 2000. Officials Methods of Analysis of the Association of Analytical Chemists. 17th edn. Association of Official Analytical Chemists, Washington, DC.
2. Armstrong T A and Spears J W. 2001. Effect of dietary boron on growth performance calcium and phosphorus metabolism and bone mechanical properties in growing barrows. Journal of Animal Science 7912: 3120–27.
3. Armstrong T A, Spears J W, Crenshaw T D and Nielsen F H. 2000. Boron supplementation of a semipurified diet for weanling pigs improves feed efficiency and bone strength characteristics and alters plasma lipid metabolites. Journal of Nutrition 130(10): 2575–81.
4. Balla G C, Nelson T S and Kirby L K. 1984. Effect of different dietary levels of calicum and phosphorus on phytate hydrolysis by chicks. Nutrition Reports International 32: 909–13.
5. Bhasker T V, Gowda N K S, Mondal S, Krishnamoorthy P, Pal D T, Mor A and Pattanaik A K. 2016. Boron influences immune and antioxidant responses by modulating hepatic superoxide dismutase activity under calcium deficit abiotic stress in Wistar rats. Journal of Trace Elements in Medicine and Biology 36: 73–79.