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  • Title: Effects of dietary sulfur amino acids and crude protein on the performance of finishing broilers.
    Author: Jeroch H, Pack M.
    Journal: Arch Tierernahr; 1995; 48(1-2):109-18. PubMed ID: 8526719.
    Abstract:
    The effects of different combinations of dietary methionine + cystine (Met + Cys) and dietary crude protein (CP) in finishing broilers were investigated in two growth studies. In Exp. 1, male broilers 29 to 42 days of age were fed 18 diets containing 16.9%, 18.7%, or 20.4% CP with six levels of Met + Cys within each protein level. Similarly, in Exp. 2 another 12 diets containing either 18.0 or 21.5% CP were fed to male broilers 29 to 48 days of age. In general, the Met + Cys requirement for optimum feed conversion was higher than for maximum growth. In both experiments, between 0.80% and 0.85% methionine + cystine optimized feed conversion. These dietary levels were valid for a 13.05 MJ ME/kg diet fed to broilers growing from 1.2 kg to 2.2 kg (Exp. 1), or for a 13.60 MJ ME/kg diet fed to broilers growing from 1.3 kg to 3.0 kg (Exp. 2). The Met + Cys requirement was not consistently affected by the dietary CP content in Exp. 1. In Exp. 2, increasing dietary CP from 18.0% to 21.5% tended to increase the Met + Cys requirement for optimum feed conversion. A dietary CP level of 18.0% to 18.7% supported performance and carcass fat deposition equal to diets containing 20.4% or 21.5% CP, respectively, when the sulfur amino acid content was adequate.
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