Data

Improving the nutritional value of cottonseed meal for broiler chickens

University of New England, Australia
Abdallh, Medani ; Iji, Paul
Viewed: [[ro.stat.viewed]] Cited: [[ro.stat.cited]] Accessed: [[ro.stat.accessed]]
ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Adc&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2FANDS&rft_id=https://hdl.handle.net/1959.11/215337&rft.title=Improving the nutritional value of cottonseed meal for broiler chickens&rft.identifier=https://hdl.handle.net/1959.11/215337&rft.publisher=University of New England, Australia&rft.description=The datasets contains for folders named according to the experiment number as follows; experiments one (7 excel files + one word); experiments two (5 excel files + one file word); experiments three (11 excel files + one file word); experiments four (13 excel files + one file word). Data collected from the four conducted experiments were focused on durability of the used dietary treatment, gross response of the birds, flock uniformity, ileal digestibility and enzymes activities. The collected and analysed data mainly used: firstly, to assess the replacement value of inexpensive CSM as an alternative to SBM in broiler chicken diets, when fed with or without novel microbial enzymes. This was assessed by measuring mainly the flock uniformity, gross response, and nutrient availability and utilization. Second, to investigate the response of CSM-containing diets to enzyme supplementation by measuring the digestibility of nutrients, including amino acids and endogenous enzyme activities, and by determining the outflow of amino acids at the axial end of the small intestine of broiler chickens. In addition, pellet durability was tested at all levels of CSM included in this study as part of diet quality assessment.&rft.creator=Abdallh, Medani &rft.creator=Iji, Paul &rft.date=2017&rft.coverage=northlimit=-27.811722486737; southlimit=-38.179346002007; westlimit=139.94790649414; eastLimit=153.65884399414; projection=WGS84&rft_rights=Attribution 3.0 AU&rft_rights=http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/au&rft_rights=Open&rft_rights=Rights holder: University of New England&rft_rights=Rights holder: School of Environmental & Rural Science&rft_rights=Rights holder: University of New England&rft_rights=Rights holder: School of Environmental & Rural Science&rft_subject=Cottonseed meal&rft_subject=microbial enzymes&rft_subject=Broiler chickens&rft_subject=Animal Nutrition&rft_subject=AGRICULTURAL AND VETERINARY SCIENCES&rft_subject=ANIMAL PRODUCTION&rft_subject=839999 - Animal Production and Animal Primary Products not elsewhere classified&rft_subject=970107 - Expanding Knowledge in the Agricultural and Veterinary Sciences&rft.type=dataset&rft.language=English Access the data

Licence & Rights:

view details

Attribution 3.0 AU

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/au

Open

Rights holder: University of New England

Rights holder: School of Environmental & Rural Science

Rights holder: University of New England

Rights holder: School of Environmental & Rural Science

Access:

Other

Full description

The datasets contains for folders named according to the experiment number as follows; experiments one (7 excel files + one word); experiments two (5 excel files + one file word); experiments three (11 excel files + one file word); experiments four (13 excel files + one file word). Data collected from the four conducted experiments were focused on durability of the used dietary treatment, gross response of the birds, flock uniformity, ileal digestibility and enzymes activities. The collected and analysed data mainly used: firstly, to assess the replacement value of inexpensive CSM as an alternative to SBM in broiler chicken diets, when fed with or without novel microbial enzymes. This was assessed by measuring mainly the flock uniformity, gross response, and nutrient availability and utilization. Second, to investigate the response of CSM-containing diets to enzyme supplementation by measuring the digestibility of nutrients, including amino acids and endogenous enzyme activities, and by determining the outflow of amino acids at the axial end of the small intestine of broiler chickens. In addition, pellet durability was tested at all levels of CSM included in this study as part of diet quality assessment.

Notes

Funding SourceFeedworks Pty Ltd, Australia

Issued: 2017-12-18

Date Submitted : 2017-12-18

Data time period: 2014-02-01 to 2017-06-30

This dataset is part of a larger collection

Click to explore relationships graph

153.65884,-27.81172 153.65884,-38.17935 139.94791,-38.17935 139.94791,-27.81172 153.65884,-27.81172

146.80337524414,-32.995534244372

Identifiers