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Effects of high inclusion levels of sugar beet pulp in diets for dry sows

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 November 2017

S A Edwards
Affiliation:
The Scottish Agricultural College, Aberdeen School of Agriculture, 581 King Street, Aberdeen AB9 1UD
A G Taylor
Affiliation:
The Scottish Agricultural College, Aberdeen School of Agriculture, 581 King Street, Aberdeen AB9 1UD
V R Fowler
Affiliation:
The Scottish Agricultural College, Aberdeen School of Agriculture, 581 King Street, Aberdeen AB9 1UD
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Extract

The dry sow is well suited to utilise high fibre diets and there are some suggestions that feeding such diets in pregnancy may enhance litter size and subsequent piglet performance. This experiment was designed to investigate the effects on performance of inclusion of a high level of fermentable fibre in the form of unmolassed sugar beet pulp (SBP) in the diet of dry sows.

24 gilts and 20 multiparous Landrace x Large White sows were allocated to one of two diets according to weaning or entry date, parity and liveweight. The diets comprised a barley/soya basal diet with either 450 g/kg wheat (diet W) or SBP substituting for this wheat to provide the same quantity of corrected digestible energy (diet B). The two diets were fed at differential levels, to supply the same daily total of corrected digestible energy, from weaning or gilt entry until farrowing. The allocated amount of diet was given in a single daily feeding period to animals confined in individual feeding stalls, and a period of one hour was allowed for the ration to be consumed. After farrowing all animals were fed twice daily on a standard diet, according to a scale related to litter size.

Type
Pig Production
Copyright
Copyright © The British Society of Animal Production 1991

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