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Evolution of maternal feed restriction practices over 60 years of selection for broiler productivity

The effect of commercial selection by poultry breeders on the growth, efficiency, and sexual maturity of broiler breeders was studied using 2 University of Alberta Meat Control strains unselected since 1957 and 1978 (AMC-1957 and AMC-1978, respectively) and 2 strains originating from the University...

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Autores principales: Carney, V.L., Anthony, N.B., Robinson, F.E., Reimer, B.L., Korver, D.R., Zuidhof, M.J., Afrouziyeh, M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9395665/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35973347
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.psj.2022.101957
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author Carney, V.L.
Anthony, N.B.
Robinson, F.E.
Reimer, B.L.
Korver, D.R.
Zuidhof, M.J.
Afrouziyeh, M.
author_facet Carney, V.L.
Anthony, N.B.
Robinson, F.E.
Reimer, B.L.
Korver, D.R.
Zuidhof, M.J.
Afrouziyeh, M.
author_sort Carney, V.L.
collection PubMed
description The effect of commercial selection by poultry breeders on the growth, efficiency, and sexual maturity of broiler breeders was studied using 2 University of Alberta Meat Control strains unselected since 1957 and 1978 (AMC-1957 and AMC-1978, respectively) and 2 strains originating from the University of Arkansas; 1995 Random-bred (1995RB) and 2015 Random-bred (2015RB). A study with a 4 × 2 factorial arrangement was conducted with the 4 strains fed at either ad libitum, or restricted levels to achieve a current commercial breeder target BW profile. Growth rate, feed intake, feed efficiency, age at sexual maturity, carcass components, and body conformation were measured. To assess reproductive development, birds were assigned to 2 fates: dissected at photostimulation or dissected after the second oviposition. At 22.4 wk of age, the restricted-fed AMC-1957, AMC-1978, 1995RB, and 2015RB reached 100, 61, 46, and 38% of their ad libitum-fed counterparts’ BW, respectively. During the rearing phase, the amount of feed needed to maintain restricted-fed birds on the target BW was 99.4, 57, 29.5, and 24.9% of their ad libitum-fed counterparts for AMC-1957, AMC-1978, 1995RB, and 2015RB, respectively. Feed restricted birds in the 2015RB had lower heat production relative to the AMC-1957 and AMC-1978, which shows that modern strains utilized feed more efficiently compared to the antique strains. This might be related to the increasing severity of feed restriction of broiler breeders over the past 60 years. Relative to AMC-1957 and AMC-1978 strains, the 1995RB and 2015RB strains had heavier breast muscle and lower fat pad weight. Although the pubertal threshold for age and BW have increased over the last 6 decades, changes in selection programs for feed efficiency have resulted in broiler breeders that prioritize nutrient allocation to growth and breast development rather than adipose storage. As a result, feed restricted modern broiler breeders may have marginally sufficient fat resources to support reproduction.
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spelling pubmed-93956652022-08-24 Evolution of maternal feed restriction practices over 60 years of selection for broiler productivity Carney, V.L. Anthony, N.B. Robinson, F.E. Reimer, B.L. Korver, D.R. Zuidhof, M.J. Afrouziyeh, M. Poult Sci MANAGEMENT AND PRODUCTION The effect of commercial selection by poultry breeders on the growth, efficiency, and sexual maturity of broiler breeders was studied using 2 University of Alberta Meat Control strains unselected since 1957 and 1978 (AMC-1957 and AMC-1978, respectively) and 2 strains originating from the University of Arkansas; 1995 Random-bred (1995RB) and 2015 Random-bred (2015RB). A study with a 4 × 2 factorial arrangement was conducted with the 4 strains fed at either ad libitum, or restricted levels to achieve a current commercial breeder target BW profile. Growth rate, feed intake, feed efficiency, age at sexual maturity, carcass components, and body conformation were measured. To assess reproductive development, birds were assigned to 2 fates: dissected at photostimulation or dissected after the second oviposition. At 22.4 wk of age, the restricted-fed AMC-1957, AMC-1978, 1995RB, and 2015RB reached 100, 61, 46, and 38% of their ad libitum-fed counterparts’ BW, respectively. During the rearing phase, the amount of feed needed to maintain restricted-fed birds on the target BW was 99.4, 57, 29.5, and 24.9% of their ad libitum-fed counterparts for AMC-1957, AMC-1978, 1995RB, and 2015RB, respectively. Feed restricted birds in the 2015RB had lower heat production relative to the AMC-1957 and AMC-1978, which shows that modern strains utilized feed more efficiently compared to the antique strains. This might be related to the increasing severity of feed restriction of broiler breeders over the past 60 years. Relative to AMC-1957 and AMC-1978 strains, the 1995RB and 2015RB strains had heavier breast muscle and lower fat pad weight. Although the pubertal threshold for age and BW have increased over the last 6 decades, changes in selection programs for feed efficiency have resulted in broiler breeders that prioritize nutrient allocation to growth and breast development rather than adipose storage. As a result, feed restricted modern broiler breeders may have marginally sufficient fat resources to support reproduction. Elsevier 2022-05-08 /pmc/articles/PMC9395665/ /pubmed/35973347 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.psj.2022.101957 Text en © 2022 The Authors https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle MANAGEMENT AND PRODUCTION
Carney, V.L.
Anthony, N.B.
Robinson, F.E.
Reimer, B.L.
Korver, D.R.
Zuidhof, M.J.
Afrouziyeh, M.
Evolution of maternal feed restriction practices over 60 years of selection for broiler productivity
title Evolution of maternal feed restriction practices over 60 years of selection for broiler productivity
title_full Evolution of maternal feed restriction practices over 60 years of selection for broiler productivity
title_fullStr Evolution of maternal feed restriction practices over 60 years of selection for broiler productivity
title_full_unstemmed Evolution of maternal feed restriction practices over 60 years of selection for broiler productivity
title_short Evolution of maternal feed restriction practices over 60 years of selection for broiler productivity
title_sort evolution of maternal feed restriction practices over 60 years of selection for broiler productivity
topic MANAGEMENT AND PRODUCTION
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9395665/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35973347
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.psj.2022.101957
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