Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Nuclear Energy News .




FARM NEWS
Finding ways to feed pigs for less
by Staff Writers
Chicago IL (SPX) Jun 14, 2012


File image.

Results of a preliminary experiment conducted at the University of Illinois indicate that it may be possible to select pigs that can make efficient use of energy in less expensive feed ingredients, thus reducing diet costs.

Less expensive feed is usually higher in fiber than the corn-soy diets typically used in U.S. swine production, explained Hans H. Stein, professor of animal sciences at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. However, the white breeds that are used in commercial pork production use only about 40 percent of the insoluble fiber.

"If you can increase that number to 50 or 60 or 70 percent, then of course, you would get a much better use of the energy in those ingredients," Stein explained.

"The white breeds have been selected for high efficiency and rapid gain for many, many generations," Stein continued. "But that's all based on corn-soy diets. However, there are also indigenous breeds of pigs that have not been selected for commercial production, and these breeds have, therefore, not been fed the corn-soybean meal diets for as many generations as the white breeds."

Among those indigenous breeds are Meishan pigs, which have been raised in China for many centuries. Stein's hypothesis was that these pigs, which have not been selected for efficiency and rapid weight gain, would use fiber more efficiently than the white breeds.

Stein and his team compared the fiber digestion of Meishan pigs with that of two groups of Yorkshire pigs. They tested four diets that used high-fiber ingredients: distillers dried grains with solubles (DDGS), soybean hulls, sugar beet pulp, and pectin. When fed DDGS, the values for apparent total tract energy digestibility were higher for the Meishan pigs (83.5%) than for either weight-matched (77.3%) or age-matched (78.8%) Yorkshire pigs. Researchers observed no significant difference in energy digestibility for the other ingredients.

"What we observed was that, particularly for the DDGS diets, the Meishans were quite a bit more effective at using that fiber," Stein said. "That diet is high in insoluble dietary fiber. When we looked at more soluble fibers, there was no difference."

Although Meishan pigs would never be used for commercial pork production in the United States, the results indicate that differences exist among breeds of pigs. Thus, it is possible that differences also exist among the white breeds and that some may use fibers more efficiently than others.

Stein stressed that this study was preliminary and said that determining if white breeds can be bred to use insoluble fiber more efficiently will be quite costly because it requires selecting pigs for multiple generations. Stein said that he and colleagues at the University of Illinois' Institute for Genomic Biology are pursuing funding for further research.

"I think it is exciting that there are some pigs that can use fiber better than we have thought in the past, and I think this will open up opportunities to think in different ways about how we can feed pigs economically," he said.

The study was published in a recent issue of the Journal of Animal Science and was co-authored with former graduate student Pedro Urriola.

.


Related Links
Agriculture at University of Illinois
Farming Today - Suppliers and Technology






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








FARM NEWS
Niger farmland threatened by locusts: official
Niamey (AFP) June 13, 2012
Large swathes of farmland are threatened by locusts in Niger even as the drought-prone African nation is grappling with a severe food crisis, a pest-control official said Wednesday. "Unless swarms are destroyed very early, locusts will reproduce and reach the cropland," Yahaya Garba, director of the CNLA agency in charge of pest-control, said in the latest bulletin of the UN Office for the C ... read more


FARM NEWS
Shell scraps biofuels plan over Brazil native land

Shell backs out of Brazil sugar-cane plans

Environmental benefit of biofuels is overestimated, new study claims

Steel-Strength Plastics That Are Clean And Green

FARM NEWS
Storing and managing solar energy for the grid

NRG Energy invests in Geostellar for solar mapping

Trina Solar and E3/DC develop energy storage solutions

India seeks green energy foreign investors

FARM NEWS
South Korea partners for offshore wind

Change in air as Africa's biggest wind farm set for Kenya

Wind Powering An Island Economy

China Leads Growth in Global Wind Power Capacity

FARM NEWS
China to trial energy-saving electricity price scheme

'Angel of the dump' transforms lives in the Philippines

How to Surpass California's Renewable Energy Goals

TEPCO to buy 1 million tons LNG a year from Qatar

FARM NEWS
S. Korea firm wins $1.3 bn Venezuela order

Ancient effect harnessed to produce electricity from waste heat

'Xena' pleads guilty over N.Zealand oil protest

Iran warns EU will pay a higher cost under oil embargo

FARM NEWS
Extremely little telescope discovers pair of odd planets

Alien Earths Could Form Earlier than Expected

Planets can form around different types of stars

Small Planets Don't Need 'Heavy Metal' Stars to Form

FARM NEWS
New paints prevent fouling of ships' hulls

NSM agrees final ANZAC maintenance deal

Skanska to build Navy explosives wharf

Iran claims designing nuclear submarine

FARM NEWS
Impact atlas catalogs over 635,000 Martian craters

e2v imaging sensors launched into space on NASA mission to Mars

NASA Mars Rover Team Aims for Landing Closer to Prime Science Site

NASA's Mars rover zeroes in on August landing




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement