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Safety of Mealworm Meal in Layer Diets and their Influence on Gut Morphology

SIMPLE SUMMARY: There is limited research on the use of the mealworm meal in laying hens’ diets and effects on relative organ weights, caecum microbiota, ileum morphology and digesta viscosity. All these parameters can affect the performance of animals, i.e., the laying and quality of eggs. The meal...

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Autores principales: Stastnik, Ondrej, Novotny, Jakub, Roztocilova, Andrea, Kouril, Petr, Kumbar, Vojtech, Cernik, Julius, Kalhotka, Libor, Pavlata, Leos, Lacina, Lubor, Mrkvicova, Eva
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8157286/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34069805
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani11051439
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author Stastnik, Ondrej
Novotny, Jakub
Roztocilova, Andrea
Kouril, Petr
Kumbar, Vojtech
Cernik, Julius
Kalhotka, Libor
Pavlata, Leos
Lacina, Lubor
Mrkvicova, Eva
author_facet Stastnik, Ondrej
Novotny, Jakub
Roztocilova, Andrea
Kouril, Petr
Kumbar, Vojtech
Cernik, Julius
Kalhotka, Libor
Pavlata, Leos
Lacina, Lubor
Mrkvicova, Eva
author_sort Stastnik, Ondrej
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: There is limited research on the use of the mealworm meal in laying hens’ diets and effects on relative organ weights, caecum microbiota, ileum morphology and digesta viscosity. All these parameters can affect the performance of animals, i.e., the laying and quality of eggs. The mealworm meal is a relatively new feedstuff, where it is necessary to exclude a possible harmful effect. Insect products have a beneficial nutrient content, but there are issues of stability, shelf life, storage and contamination, which could, in the case of negative properties, affect the morphology of the digestive tract, cause liver damage and, as a result, affect the animal performance parameters. The main objective of this study was to verify the safety of the mealworm meal in the feed of laying hens from 17–42 weeks of age. Therefore, the feed mixtures were tested in terms of microbiological stability, fungal and mycotoxin content and selected parameters of hens’ intestinal morphology and physiology were monitored. Feed mixtures with proportions of insect products were microbially stable even after four months. Based on the results of this study, use of two to five percent of mealworm meal in hen′s diet may be used as a sustainable and safe protein feed. ABSTRACT: The main objective of this study was to verify the safety of mealworm meal in the feed of laying hens from 17 to 42 weeks of age. Therefore, the feed mixtures were tested in terms of microbiological stability, fungal and mycotoxin content and selected parameters of hens’ intestinal morphology and physiology were monitored. The experiment was carried out with 30 Lohmann Brown Classic hens. Hens were divided by body mass into three equal groups with 10 replicates per treatment. The two experimental groups received feed mixtures containing 2% and 5% yellow mealworm (Tenebrio molitor L.) meal. The third group was a control group which had 0% of mealworm meal in the diet. Diets with 2% and 5% of mealworm meals did not affect the length of villi and microbiome of the caecum. The highest digesta viscosity from the ileum was found in the group with 5% mealworm, which may indicate a slower passage of the digesta through the digestive tract. Based on our results, it may be concluded that the proportion of mealworm meals does not deteriorate the quality of feeds. Mealworm meal does not negatively affect microbial stability in experimental feeds. Therefore, it can be recommended the two and (or) five percent of mealworm meal inclusion in hen’s diet.
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spelling pubmed-81572862021-05-28 Safety of Mealworm Meal in Layer Diets and their Influence on Gut Morphology Stastnik, Ondrej Novotny, Jakub Roztocilova, Andrea Kouril, Petr Kumbar, Vojtech Cernik, Julius Kalhotka, Libor Pavlata, Leos Lacina, Lubor Mrkvicova, Eva Animals (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: There is limited research on the use of the mealworm meal in laying hens’ diets and effects on relative organ weights, caecum microbiota, ileum morphology and digesta viscosity. All these parameters can affect the performance of animals, i.e., the laying and quality of eggs. The mealworm meal is a relatively new feedstuff, where it is necessary to exclude a possible harmful effect. Insect products have a beneficial nutrient content, but there are issues of stability, shelf life, storage and contamination, which could, in the case of negative properties, affect the morphology of the digestive tract, cause liver damage and, as a result, affect the animal performance parameters. The main objective of this study was to verify the safety of the mealworm meal in the feed of laying hens from 17–42 weeks of age. Therefore, the feed mixtures were tested in terms of microbiological stability, fungal and mycotoxin content and selected parameters of hens’ intestinal morphology and physiology were monitored. Feed mixtures with proportions of insect products were microbially stable even after four months. Based on the results of this study, use of two to five percent of mealworm meal in hen′s diet may be used as a sustainable and safe protein feed. ABSTRACT: The main objective of this study was to verify the safety of mealworm meal in the feed of laying hens from 17 to 42 weeks of age. Therefore, the feed mixtures were tested in terms of microbiological stability, fungal and mycotoxin content and selected parameters of hens’ intestinal morphology and physiology were monitored. The experiment was carried out with 30 Lohmann Brown Classic hens. Hens were divided by body mass into three equal groups with 10 replicates per treatment. The two experimental groups received feed mixtures containing 2% and 5% yellow mealworm (Tenebrio molitor L.) meal. The third group was a control group which had 0% of mealworm meal in the diet. Diets with 2% and 5% of mealworm meals did not affect the length of villi and microbiome of the caecum. The highest digesta viscosity from the ileum was found in the group with 5% mealworm, which may indicate a slower passage of the digesta through the digestive tract. Based on our results, it may be concluded that the proportion of mealworm meals does not deteriorate the quality of feeds. Mealworm meal does not negatively affect microbial stability in experimental feeds. Therefore, it can be recommended the two and (or) five percent of mealworm meal inclusion in hen’s diet. MDPI 2021-05-18 /pmc/articles/PMC8157286/ /pubmed/34069805 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani11051439 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Stastnik, Ondrej
Novotny, Jakub
Roztocilova, Andrea
Kouril, Petr
Kumbar, Vojtech
Cernik, Julius
Kalhotka, Libor
Pavlata, Leos
Lacina, Lubor
Mrkvicova, Eva
Safety of Mealworm Meal in Layer Diets and their Influence on Gut Morphology
title Safety of Mealworm Meal in Layer Diets and their Influence on Gut Morphology
title_full Safety of Mealworm Meal in Layer Diets and their Influence on Gut Morphology
title_fullStr Safety of Mealworm Meal in Layer Diets and their Influence on Gut Morphology
title_full_unstemmed Safety of Mealworm Meal in Layer Diets and their Influence on Gut Morphology
title_short Safety of Mealworm Meal in Layer Diets and their Influence on Gut Morphology
title_sort safety of mealworm meal in layer diets and their influence on gut morphology
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8157286/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34069805
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani11051439
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