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Poultry Science, Vol 76, Issue 8, 1172-1177
Copyright © 1997 by Poultry Science Association


Articles

Performance of commercial laying hens fed various phosphorus levels, with and without supplemental phytase

RW Gordon and DA Roland Sr

Department of Poultry Science, Auburn University, Alabama 36849, USA.

A 17-wk study was conducted to evaluate the effects of supplementing laying hen diets with a commercially produced microbial phytase. Hy-Line W-36 pullets (21 wk of age) were randomly allocated to 1 of 10 diets in a factorial arrangement of five levels of nonphytate phosphorus (0.1 to 0.5% NPP) and two levels of phytase (0 and 300 U/kg feed). Dietary metabolizable energy, protein, and calcium were maintained at 2,816 kcal/kg, 16.6%, and 4%, respectively. Criteria evaluated included egg production, feed consumption, egg weight, egg specific gravity, mortality, and various bone quality parameters. Feeding 0.1% NPP without supplemental phytase decreased egg production (hen-housed) 8.1% over the entire study and 29.6% over the last 4 wk, relative to other diets without supplemental phytase. Similarly, feed consumption of hens fed 0.1% NPP without phytase decreased 5.8% over 17 wk and 13.0% over the last 4 wk. Egg production and feed consumption were maintained at the level of other treatments without phytase when the 0.1% NPP diet was supplemented with phytase (82.1% and 82.4 g per hen per d, respectively). Egg weights and egg specific gravity decreased and mortality increased when hens consumed 0.1% NPP without phytase. Supplementing the 0.1% NPP diet with phytase completely corrected these adverse effects. No deficiency symptoms were observed in hens fed diets containing 0.2 to 0.5% NPP. Phytase supplementation of these diets gave no further improvements in performance.


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