Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 September 2010
In the first of two experiments of 6 × 6 Latin-square design a diet of barley, soya bean meal and fish meal, known to give an adequate lysine intake (56 g/day) at the level of feeding adopted, was diluted with maize starch to give crude protein intakes ranging between 448 and 923 g/day but with the lysine intake held constant by using synthetic lysine in the diets. The diets were given to sows suckling ten piglets between days 12 and 30 of lactation. Dietary amino acid adequacy was assessed by changes in plasma urea, urinary urea, urinary nitrogen and plasma amino acid concentrations. The dietary amino acid supply became limiting with a protein intake of approximately 730 g/day. In the second experiment, a diet of similar composition was used with varying additions of synthetic threonine, methionine, isoleucine and tryptophan: the control diet contained all the synthetic amino acids added, the basal diet none and the other diets were formed by adding groups of three out of the four synthetic amino acids. On the basis of some of the variables studied, it was concluded that, for this diet, threonine was the limiting amino acid after lysine.