Fat-soluble vitamin supplementation levels in diets for laying hens from 28 to 44 weeks of age

1Citations
Citations of this article
13Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

This study aimed to examine the impact of levels of dietary supplementation with fat-soluble vitamins on the production performance and egg quality of laying hens. Three hundred Hy-Line White W-36 laying hens were evaluated from 28 to 44 weeks of age. The birds were allotted to one of six treatments in a randomized block design with 10 replicates with five birds each. Performance and egg quality parameters were evaluated in four 28-day periods. A corn and soybean meal-based basal diet was formulated so as to meet the nutritional requirements of the animals, with the exception of fatsoluble vitamins. The treatments consisted of dietary supplementation with 0%, 33.3%, 66.7%, 100.0%, 133.3% or 166.7% of fat-soluble vitamins (100% supplementation consisted of 7500 IU, 2000 IU, 10 IU and 1.8 mg of vitamins A, D3, E and K per kilogram of diet, respectively). Eggshell weight, shell thickness, shell strength, feed intake, egg weight, feed conversion per egg mass and feed conversion per dozen eggs showed a quadratic response (p≤0.05) to the treatments, whereas egg mass responded linearly. Optimal results were obtained at an average fat-soluble vitamin supplementation level of 109%, which corresponds to 8175 IU of vitamin A, 2180 IU of vitamin D3, 10.9 IU of vitamin E and 1.96 mg of vitamin K per kilogram of diet.

Author supplied keywords

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Félix, D. O., Silva, A. S., Fialho, A. T. S., Oliveira, C. J. P., Brito, C. O., Tavernari, F. C., … Albino, L. F. T. (2020). Fat-soluble vitamin supplementation levels in diets for laying hens from 28 to 44 weeks of age. Revista Brasileira de Ciencia Avicola / Brazilian Journal of Poultry Science, 22(3), 1–10. https://doi.org/10.1590/1806-9061-2019-1239

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free