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A note on the effect of protein concentration in the diets of pregnant sows on the performance and carcass quality of their progeny
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 September 2010
Extract
Livingston (1962) showed that high levels of dietary protein during pregnancy increased the mean thickness of muscle fibres of M. longissimus dorsi and M. psoas majoris in newly-born piglets. Livingston did not detect this effect in pigs killed at pork weight. Preliminary results of Elsley and MacPherson (1964) indicated that the concentration of dietary protein during pregnancy can influence the nitrogen content of newly-born pigs when birth weight is standardised to 1 kg. to reduce variation; subsequent results (Elsley, MacPherson and McDonald, unpublished data) did not confirm these findings. Any differences attributable to the nutrition of the pregnant sow which are present in the newly-born pig are of practical importance only if they are reflected in changes in subsequent performance.
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- Copyright © British Society of Animal Science 1966
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