Effect on pig performance of varying the level of meat meal in cereal grain-meat meal diets
VF Fagan and PR Gillis
Australian Journal of Experimental Agriculture and Animal Husbandry
16(81) 478 - 483
Published: 1976
Abstract
A pig feeding experiment was conducted in which six levels of meat meal ranging from 5 per cent to 30 per cent in increments of 5 per cent were fed throughout the experiment. Two additional treatments were included in which an initial meat meal level of 20 per cent was changed to 10 per cent in one treatment (20-10 per cent) and 0 per cent in the other (20-0 per cent) at 54.6 kg liveweight. The optimum level of meat meal was found to vary with the stage of development of the animals. At 30 kg liveweight optimum growth rate and food conversion efficiency occurred at a meat meal level of approximately 21.0 per cent. At 70 kg liveweight optimum growth rate and food conversion efficiency occurred on a diet with approximately 14.5 per cent meat meal. Reducing the level of meat meal at 54.6 kg from 20 per cent to 10 per cent had no adverse effect on any of the attributes measured. However, the reduction from 20 per cent to 0 per cent had a highly significant depressive effect on growth rate, food conversion efficiency and lean meat development. For the treatments fed at constant levels of meat meal, fat cover decreased with increasing meat meal whereas lean meat development increased with increasing meat meal up to 25 per cent but then showed a decline at 30 per cent.https://doi.org/10.1071/EA9760478
© CSIRO 1976