Effects of organic acid and probiotic on performance and gut morphology in broiler chickens

The effects of organic acid, probiotic and a combination of the two on performance and gut morphology in broiler chickens were investigated. Two hundred and forty one-day-old Arbor Acre broiler chicks were randomly assigned to five dietary treatments with six replicates, each with eight birds. The treatments were basal diet (negative control, NC), basal diet + antibiotic (positive control (PC)), NC + 0.4% organic acid (OA), NC + 0.3% probiotic (PB) and NC + 0.4% OA and 0.3% PB. Reduced body weight gain (BWG) was recorded for birds on the NC diet at the starter phase and over the total period. The addition of OA significantly increased BWG compared to values obtained in birds on the NC and other diets. Diet had no effect on BWG at the grower phase or on feed intake, dry matter intake and feed conversion ratio in any growth phase. Gain : feed ratio was lowered in the NC diet, but improved significantly by OA and PB in the starter phase. Organic acid supplementation reduced the weight of the bursa of Fabricius. The weight of pancreas, height of villi and crypt depth were reduced in birds on the NC diet compared with those on OA, PB and a combination of these. Diet had no effects on the weights of the lungs, heart, spleen, kidneys, liver, villus width, villus height : crypt depth ratio, lactic acid bacteria, coliform bacteria and total bacterial count in any gut section. In conclusion, supplementation of broiler diets with OA and PB could improve their growth and gut morphology better than antibiotics would, with a greater positive effect in the starter phase.

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Main Authors: Agboola,A.F., Omidiwura,B.R.O., Odu,O., Popoola,I.O., Iyayi,E.A.
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: The South African Society for Animal Science (SASAS) 2015
Online Access:http://www.scielo.org.za/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0375-15892015000500004
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spelling oai:scielo:S0375-158920150005000042016-02-23Effects of organic acid and probiotic on performance and gut morphology in broiler chickensAgboola,A.F.Omidiwura,B.R.O.Odu,O.Popoola,I.O.Iyayi,E.A. Broiler chickens gut health organic acids performance probiotics The effects of organic acid, probiotic and a combination of the two on performance and gut morphology in broiler chickens were investigated. Two hundred and forty one-day-old Arbor Acre broiler chicks were randomly assigned to five dietary treatments with six replicates, each with eight birds. The treatments were basal diet (negative control, NC), basal diet + antibiotic (positive control (PC)), NC + 0.4% organic acid (OA), NC + 0.3% probiotic (PB) and NC + 0.4% OA and 0.3% PB. Reduced body weight gain (BWG) was recorded for birds on the NC diet at the starter phase and over the total period. The addition of OA significantly increased BWG compared to values obtained in birds on the NC and other diets. Diet had no effect on BWG at the grower phase or on feed intake, dry matter intake and feed conversion ratio in any growth phase. Gain : feed ratio was lowered in the NC diet, but improved significantly by OA and PB in the starter phase. Organic acid supplementation reduced the weight of the bursa of Fabricius. The weight of pancreas, height of villi and crypt depth were reduced in birds on the NC diet compared with those on OA, PB and a combination of these. Diet had no effects on the weights of the lungs, heart, spleen, kidneys, liver, villus width, villus height : crypt depth ratio, lactic acid bacteria, coliform bacteria and total bacterial count in any gut section. In conclusion, supplementation of broiler diets with OA and PB could improve their growth and gut morphology better than antibiotics would, with a greater positive effect in the starter phase.The South African Society for Animal Science (SASAS)South African Journal of Animal Science v.45 n.5 20152015-01-01journal articletext/htmlhttp://www.scielo.org.za/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0375-15892015000500004en
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country Sudáfrica
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author Agboola,A.F.
Omidiwura,B.R.O.
Odu,O.
Popoola,I.O.
Iyayi,E.A.
spellingShingle Agboola,A.F.
Omidiwura,B.R.O.
Odu,O.
Popoola,I.O.
Iyayi,E.A.
Effects of organic acid and probiotic on performance and gut morphology in broiler chickens
author_facet Agboola,A.F.
Omidiwura,B.R.O.
Odu,O.
Popoola,I.O.
Iyayi,E.A.
author_sort Agboola,A.F.
title Effects of organic acid and probiotic on performance and gut morphology in broiler chickens
title_short Effects of organic acid and probiotic on performance and gut morphology in broiler chickens
title_full Effects of organic acid and probiotic on performance and gut morphology in broiler chickens
title_fullStr Effects of organic acid and probiotic on performance and gut morphology in broiler chickens
title_full_unstemmed Effects of organic acid and probiotic on performance and gut morphology in broiler chickens
title_sort effects of organic acid and probiotic on performance and gut morphology in broiler chickens
description The effects of organic acid, probiotic and a combination of the two on performance and gut morphology in broiler chickens were investigated. Two hundred and forty one-day-old Arbor Acre broiler chicks were randomly assigned to five dietary treatments with six replicates, each with eight birds. The treatments were basal diet (negative control, NC), basal diet + antibiotic (positive control (PC)), NC + 0.4% organic acid (OA), NC + 0.3% probiotic (PB) and NC + 0.4% OA and 0.3% PB. Reduced body weight gain (BWG) was recorded for birds on the NC diet at the starter phase and over the total period. The addition of OA significantly increased BWG compared to values obtained in birds on the NC and other diets. Diet had no effect on BWG at the grower phase or on feed intake, dry matter intake and feed conversion ratio in any growth phase. Gain : feed ratio was lowered in the NC diet, but improved significantly by OA and PB in the starter phase. Organic acid supplementation reduced the weight of the bursa of Fabricius. The weight of pancreas, height of villi and crypt depth were reduced in birds on the NC diet compared with those on OA, PB and a combination of these. Diet had no effects on the weights of the lungs, heart, spleen, kidneys, liver, villus width, villus height : crypt depth ratio, lactic acid bacteria, coliform bacteria and total bacterial count in any gut section. In conclusion, supplementation of broiler diets with OA and PB could improve their growth and gut morphology better than antibiotics would, with a greater positive effect in the starter phase.
publisher The South African Society for Animal Science (SASAS)
publishDate 2015
url http://www.scielo.org.za/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0375-15892015000500004
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