Feeding graded levels of dried Sea buckthorn (Hippophaes rhamnoides) berries to broiler chickens

Author:

Pirgozliev Vasil1ORCID,Mansbridge Stephen C.1ORCID,Whiting Izzy M.1,Rose Stephen P.1ORCID,Kljak Kristina2ORCID,Johnson Amy E.3,Drijfhout Falko3ORCID,Orczewska‐Dudek Sylwia4ORCID,Atanasov Atanas G.567ORCID,Mihova Teodora8

Affiliation:

1. National Institute of Poultry Husbandry Harper Adams University Shropshire UK

2. Faculty of Agriculture University of Zagreb Zagreb Croatia

3. Keele University Staffordshire UK

4. National Research Institute of Animal Production Morawica Poland

5. Ludwig Boltzmann Institute for Digital Health and Patient Safety Medical University of Vienna Vienna Austria

6. Institute of Genetics and Animal Biotechnology of the Polish Academy of Sciences Magdalenka Poland

7. Institute of Neurobiology, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences Sofia Bulgaria

8. Research Institute of Mountain Stockbreeding and Agriculture Troyan Bulgaria

Abstract

AbstractThe aim of this study was to assess the effects of graded levels (0, 3, 6, 9 and 12 g/kg) of dry Sea buckthorn (SB) berries on growth performance, gastrointestinal tract (GIT) development, jejunal histomorphology, bird antioxidant status and caecal short‐chain fatty acid concentration when fed to female Ross 308 broiler chickens. In addition, expression of cytokine biomarker genes in the jejunum was evaluated. The five experimental diets were fed from 7 to 21 days age to 8 pens (two birds in each) following randomisation. Feeding SB did not influence bird growth performance (p > .05). There was a linear decrease in butyric, acetic and valeric acid concentrations in caecal digesta (p < .05) and a decrease (p < .05) in crypt depth. The expression of IFNG and CD40LG responded quadratically (p < .05), peaking at 6–9 g/kg dietary inclusion of SB, respectively. Other studied variables were not affected by dietary SB inclusion (p > .05). Feeding dry SB berries up to 12 g/kg of diet did not improve the zootechnical variables of healthy commercial‐strain broilers in this study.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Agronomy and Crop Science

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