Administration of a Multi-Genus Synbiotic to Broilers: Effects on Gut Health, Microbial Composition and Performance

Author:

Prentza ZoiORCID,Castellone Francesco,Legnardi MatteoORCID,Antlinger BirgitORCID,Segura-Wang MaiaORCID,Kefalas Giorgos,Papaioannou Nikolaos,Stylianaki Ioanna,Papatsiros Vasileios G.ORCID,Franzo GiovanniORCID,Cecchinato MattiaORCID,Koutoulis KonstantinosORCID

Abstract

In recent years, the applicability of prebiotics, probiotics and their mixtures, defined as synbiotics, in poultry production has received considerable attention. Following the increasing regulation of antibiotic use, these nutraceuticals are seen as an alternative way to sustain production efficiency and resistance to pathogens and stressors by modulating birds’ gut health. The aim of this study was to evaluate the benefits provided under field conditions by administering the multi-species synbiotic PoultryStar® sol to broilers in drinking water. To this purpose, three Ross 308 broiler flocks, representing separate progenies of a breeder flock which was treated with the same synbiotic, were housed in separate farms, divided into treatment and control groups, and followed throughout the productive cycle. Synbiotic administration was shown to improve gut health even in absence of a challenge, with limited changes in terms of macroscopic intestinal lesions and more overt differences related to histopathological scores and villi length. Synbiotic-fed chickens performed consistently better in terms of body weight gain, feed conversion ratio and survivability. Lastly, the evaluation of the caecal microbiome through next-generation sequencing highlighted the effects of synbiotic supplementation on the composition of the bacterial population, the implications of which will, however, require further studies to be better comprehended.

Funder

BIOMIN GmbH

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Veterinary,Animal Science and Zoology

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