Evaluation of Increasing Concentrations of Supplemental Choline Chloride on Modern Broiler Chicken Growth Performance and Carcass Characteristics

Author:

Gregg Caroline R.1ORCID,Hutson Brittany L.1,Flees Joshua J.1,Lowman Zachary S.2ORCID,Estes Kari A.2,Starkey Jessica D.1ORCID,Starkey Charles W.13

Affiliation:

1. Department of Poultry Science, Auburn University, Auburn, AL 36832, USA

2. Animal Nutrition and Health Division, Balchem Corporation, New Hampton, NY 10958, USA

3. North American Renderers Association, Alexandria, VA 22314, USA

Abstract

Choline has been demonstrated to partially substitute methionine in broiler chicken diets due to their interconnected biosynthesis pathways. Yet, research on the impacts of dietary choline supplementation on modern strains of high-yielding broilers is limited. The objective was to evaluate the effect of increasing additions of choline chloride on the performance and carcass characteristics of broilers fed reduced methionine diets and reared under summer environmental conditions. Ross 708 x Yield Plus male broilers were reared for 41 days on used litter in floor pens (n = 2232; 31 birds per pen). Birds were fed one of six corn and soybean meal-based, reduced methionine diets containing 0, 400, 800, 1200, 1600, or 2000 mg of added choline chloride per kg of feed. Diets were provided in three phases. On day 43, 10 birds per pen were processed. Increasing dietary choline resulted in similar body weight gain, reduced feed intake, and improved feed efficiency. Choline chloride supplementation linearly increased both breast and carcass yields while concomitantly increasing the incidence and severity of wooden-breast-affected fillets. These results indicate that supplementing reduced-methionine broiler diets with choline chloride during high environmental temperatures may improve feed efficiency and increase carcass and breast yields but may also increase wooden breast.

Funder

U.S. Department of Agriculture National Institute of Food and Agriculture Hatch program and Alabama Agricultural Experiment Station

Balchem Corp., Inc.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Veterinary,Animal Science and Zoology

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