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EFFECT OF ORGANIC ZINC SUPPLEMENTATION ON PERFORMANCE, ANTIOXIDANT STATUS AND IMMUNE RESPONSE IN WHITE LEGHORN LAYERS

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Title EFFECT OF ORGANIC ZINC SUPPLEMENTATION ON PERFORMANCE, ANTIOXIDANT STATUS AND IMMUNE RESPONSE IN WHITE LEGHORN LAYERS
 
Creator K. APPALA SURI
 
Contributor Dr. K.VIJAYALAKSHMI
 
Subject biological phenomena, livestock, eggs, zinc, proteins, layering, productivity, minerals, concentrates, enzymes
 
Description Zinc (Zn) is one of the dietary essential minerals which exerts various metabolic functions
by influencing various enzymatic activities in the biological system. It is required for normal
growth, skeletal development, immune system function as well as egg production. NRC (1994)
recommended 35 ppm of Zn for White Leghorn (WL) layers. These recommendations were
established two decades ago, considering the egg production as principal criterion, the relevance of
which is questionable for the current genetically improved WL layers which prone to more stress. It
is mostly supplemented from inorganic sources like zinc sulphate (ZnSO4), zinc oxide (Zn0), etc.
The lower retention coupled with higher levels of mineral salts supplementation results in excess of
mineral excreted in poultry manure. Organic sources are gaining attention in poultry • due to better
bioavailability than their inorganic sources.
An experiment was conducted with an aim to study the effect of organic Zn supplementation
on performance, antioxidants status, immune response and retention of Zn in WL layers. Seventy
two WL layers at thirty eight weeks age were randomly allotted to 72 replicates considering each
bird as a replicate. The hens were reared in individual California type cages having the provision of
individual feeding. A corn-soybean meal, deoiled ricebran basal diet (BD) was prepared for layers
to meet the nutritional requirements, as recommended by NRC (1994) except Zn. Experimental
diets were viz., BD with 35 ppm Zn supplementation from ZnSO4 (inorganic) and BD with Znbioplex
(organic) at 35, 70 and 105 ppm. Each diet was allotted to 18 replicates and fed ad libitum
from 38 to 50 weeks of age. Body weights, feed intake and feed conversion ratio (FCR) were
measured period wise. At the end of each 28 days period, eggs were collected during the last 5 days
from all the birds to record egg weight and egg quality parameters. The Zn content in egg was
measured using Atomic Absorption Spectrophotometry. The cell mediated immune (CMI) response
was assessed by measuring cutaneous basophilic hypersensitivity to phytohemagglutinin P (PHA-P)
and humoral immune response (HI) by log2 titre against New castle Disease vaccine was measured
after 10 weeks from the starting of experiment. At the last week of feeding trial, blood samples
were collected from 8 birds of each dietary treatment to collect serum and measure antioxidant
enzyme activities. Increasing the concentration of organic Zn from 35 ppm to either 70 or 105 ppmin diets of
WL layers had no further advantage on feed intake, FCR, hen day egg production, egg weight and
body weight gain, which were comparable to those fed 35 ppm inorganic Zn. Similarly, the organic
Zn supplementation at 35ppm level and two fold increase in dietary concentration did not influence
the egg quality parameters significantly (P>0.05). However, serum ,total protein concentration was
significantly (P
 
Date 2017-01-02T12:19:58Z
2017-01-02T12:19:58Z
2015-12-02
 
Type Thesis
 
Identifier http://krishikosh.egranth.ac.in/handle/1/93900
 
Relation D;442
 
Format application/pdf
 
Publisher PVNR TVU