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Poult Sci 2007. 86:857-868
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METABOLISM AND NUTRITION

The Determination of Retainable Phosphorus, Relative Biological Availability, and Relative Biological Value of Phosphorus Sources for Broilers

C. N. Coon1, S. Seo2 and M. K. Manangi

Department of Poultry Science, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville 72701

1 Corresponding author: ccoon{at}uark.edu

A 10- to 21-d chick bioassay was conducted to determine the absolute retention value (ARV) for 2 different defluorinated phosphates (DF-1 and DF-2) and a reagent grade dicalcium phosphate (DCP). The total and test P in excreta regressed on feed P levels were subjected to general straight-line (linear), 1-slope broken-line, 2-slope broken-line, and polynomial regression methods to find the best analysis model. The relative biological availability (RBA) and relative biological value (RBV) for P from the 2 different defluorinated phosphates (DF-1 and DF-2) were obtained by the slope ratio method using 3 different bone measurements (% tibia ash, tibia breaking force, tibia weight) and RBV calculated using percentage tibia ash, weight gain, and feed/gain. The DCP was used as reference standard for RBA and RBV. The ARV measured at the breakpoints for test P by 2-slope analysis were determined to be 82.99% for DCP, 76.34% for DF-1, and 70.30% for DF-2. The ARV of test P determined at 0.45% NPP was 62.41% for DCP, 63.58% for DF-1, and 59.25% for DF-2. The relationship of ARV and RBA were similar in that DCP was 6% higher in ARV at the breakpoint compared with DF-1 and the RBA of DF-1 was 71 and 91% from tibia weight and tibia breaking force, respectively, compared with the bone parameters from chicks fed DCP. The DF-1 phosphate had 3 and 7% higher ARV at the breakpoint and 0.45% NPP, respectively, compared with DF-2. The RBA of DF-2 was 59 and 80% from tibia weight and bone-breaking force. The ARV of phosphate sources were independent of an arbitrary reference. The ARV for P sources provide retainable P information for industry-based feed formulation that can reduce excess P in poultry waste. The excreta P data from broilers fed increasing levels of DCP indicates that the data are best described statistically with a 1-slope broken-line regression, 2-slope broken-line regression, or polynomial regression.

Key Words: retainable phosphorus • relative biological availability • phosphorus retention bioassay • nonphytate phosphorus requirement • broiler

2 Present address: Department of Natural Science, Albany State University, Albany, GA 31705.




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M. K. Manangi and C. N. Coon
Phytate Phosphorus Hydrolysis in Broilers in Response to Dietary Phytase, Calcium, and Phosphorus Concentrations
Poult. Sci., August 1, 2008; 87(8): 1577 - 1586.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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