The effects of replacing wheat and soyabean meal with duckweed (Lemna minor) and including enzymes in the diet of laying hens on the yield and quality of eggs, biochemical parameters, and their antioxidant status

Author:

Baghban‐Kanani Payam12,Oteri Marianna3,Hosseintabar‐Ghasemabad Babak14,Azimi‐Youvalari Saba5,Di Rosa Ambra Rita3,Chiofalo Biagina3,Seidavi Alireza6ORCID,Phillips Clive J. C.78ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Animal Science, Faculty of Agriculture University of Tabriz Tabriz Iran

2. Noavaran Arka Tejarat Kabodan Company Urmia Iran

3. Department of Veterinary Sciences University of Messina Messina Italy

4. Darvash Giah Khazar Medicinal Herbs Complex Rasht Iran

5. Department of Animal Science Urmia University Urmia Iran

6. Department of Animal Science, Rasht Branch Islamic Azad University Rasht Iran

7. Institute of Veterinary Medicine and Animal Sciences Estonian University of Life Sciences Tartu Estonia

8. Curtin University Sustainability Policy (CUSP) Institute, Faculty of Humanities Bentley Western Australia Australia

Abstract

AbstractDuckweed is a rapidly growing aquatic plant, which could be used in the diet of laying hens to enhance carbon capture and improve land use efficiency. Digestion may be improved by supplementation with exogenous enzymes. We replaced soyabean meal and wheat with duckweed in a 10‐week study with 432, 60‐week‐old Hy‐Line W‐36 layers, divided into six isocaloric and isonitrogenous dietary treatments, each with eight replicates. Two factors were investigated: first, duckweed substituted for wheat gluten meal and soyabean meal at 0, 7.5 and 15% of the diet, and second, with and without a multi‐enzyme supplement (500 mg/kg). Duckweed did not affect egg output or weight, but it improved yolk color (P = 0.01) and reduced the liver enzymes aspartate aminotransferase (P = 0.04) and alanine aminotransferase (P = 0.02) in serum, suggesting hepatoprotective effects. Enzyme addition did not alter the effects of including duckweed in the diet, but it increased feed intake (P = 0.03). It is concluded that, as well as offering the potential to increase land productivity, inclusion of duckweed in the diet of laying hens enhances egg yolk color and hepatoprotection, without detrimental effects on performance.

Funder

Islamic Azad University

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Medicine

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