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Poultry Science, Vol 85, Issue 1, 39-47
Copyright © 2006 by Poultry Science Association


Articles

The effect of maternal dietary vitamin D3 supplementation on performance and tibial dyschondroplasia of broiler chicks

JP Driver, A Atencio, GM Pesti, HM Edwards Jr, and RI Bakalli

Department of Poultry Science, University of Georgia, Athens 30602-2772, USA. jdriver@jax.org

A series of experiments was conducted to investigate the effects of maternal dietary vitamin D3 supplementation at 4 different times during the laying cycle, on the performance and bone quality of broiler chicks fed a diet that induced tibial dyschondroplasia (TD) or an adequate diet. Ross x Ross broiler breeder hens were fed a corn-soy diet with various levels of vitamin D3 from 24 to 66 wk of age. Eggs were collected at 39, 44, 53, and 64 wk of age and hatched. Chicks from hens fed 250 IU of D3/kg (low maternal D3 or LMD3) and 2,000 IU of D3/ kg (high maternal D3 or HMD3) levels were placed in battery brooders and fed the diets from 0 to 16 d. At 16 d, the chicks were weighed and killed; the left tibias were used for bone ash determinations, and the right tibias were used to score the incidence and severity of TD (0, 1, 2, or 3, where 3 is the most severe). Body weight gain and feed intake were significantly lower for the LMD3 chicks at wk 44 and 64, although there was no difference in weight at hatch. For the first 2 hatches (wk 39 and 44), the LMD3 and HMD3 chicks demonstrated high average TD scores (2.03 and 1.57 vs. 2.05 and 1.75 for the LMD3 vs. HMD3 chicks, respectively) and high average incidences of severe TD (50 and 35% vs. 45 and 34% for LMD3 vs. HMD3 levels, respectively). However, results from the last 2 hatches (wk 53 and 64) showed that HMD3 chicks, compared with LMD3 chicks, had reduced average TD scores (1.39 and 1.47 vs. 1.01 and 0.44 for LMD3 vs. HMD3 levels, respectively) and severe TD incidence (36 and 40% vs. 17 and 8% for the LMD3 vs. HMD3 levels, respectively). In this experiment, as egg production declined toward the end of the laying cycle, hens fed the HMD3 might have been able to deposit sufficient quantities of vitamin D3 in the egg to maintain excellent body weight gain at 16 d of age and reduce the incidence and severity of TD. Hens fed the LMD3 diet were unable to produce similar improvements.


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