Lysine and Protein Levels in Corn-Soybean Meal Diets for Growing-Finishing Swine
- 1 March 1980
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Journal of Animal Science
- Vol. 50 (3) , 467-471
- https://doi.org/10.2527/jas1980.503467x
Abstract
Previous work with growing swine indicated that the lysine requirement, expressed as a percentage of the diet, decreased by .02 percentage units with each 1% reduction in dietary protein level. Thus, the dietary lysine needed for optimal performance may be less than the reported requirement when a portion of the soybean meal in a corn-soybean meal diet is replaced with crystalline lysine. An experiment was conducted to test this concept in each of three phases of growth: growing (23.6 to 47.2 kg), early finishing (47.2 to 74.8 kg) and late finishing (74.8 to 92.8 kg). Dietary crude protein levels were 16, 13 and 12% for the positive control regimen and 14, 11.5 and 11% for the negative control regimen during the growing, early finishing and late finishing periods, respectively. In each phase of growth, regimen 1 was the positive control; regimen 2 was the negative control plus lysine to the level in the positive control; regimen 3 was the negative control plus lysine to the level in the positive control less .02% lysine for each 1% decrease in crude protein from the positive control level; and regimen 4 was the negative control. Ninety-six crossbred pigs were used to form two barrow and two gilts replicates with six pigs per pen-replicate. Average daily gains summarized over the entire growing-finishing period were .74, .75, .75 and .65 kg per day for regimens 1, 2, 3 and 4, respectively. Corresponding gain to feed ratios were .29, .29, .30 and .26. Within each growth phase, average daily gain and gain to feed ratio followed patterns similar to the overall results. Carcass evaluation of barrows indicated a trend toward leaner carcasses from pigs on regimens 1, 2 and 3 than from those on regimen 4. Thus, the lysine requirement can be reduced when crude protein levels are reduced by replacing soybean meal with synthetic lysine. Copyright © 1980. American Society of Animal Science . Copyright 1980 by American Society of Animal ScienceThis publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- Protein Level, Lysine Level and Source Interaction in Young PigsJournal of Animal Science, 1978
- Arginine and its Relationship to the Antibiotic Growth Response in SwineJournal of Animal Science, 1977
- Lysine Requirement of Growing Pigs at Two Levels of Dietary ProteinJournal of Animal Science, 1975
- Gain, Feed Efficiency and Carcass Characteristics of Swine Fed Supplemental Lysine and Methionine in Corn-Soybean Meal Diets during the Growing and Finishing PeriodsJournal of Animal Science, 1974
- Effect of a Combination of Diethylstilbestrol and Methyltestosterone, Sex and Dietary Protein Level on Performance and Carcass Characteristics of Finishing SwineJournal of Animal Science, 1967
- Effect of Various Levels of Dietary Lysine on Certain Blood Phenomena, Muscle Development, and Muscle-Protein Biological Value of Growing SwineJournal of Animal Science, 1963
- Effect of Dietary Lysine Level on Muscle Size and Composition in SwineJournal of Animal Science, 1963
- The Lysine Requirement of Weanling Swine at Two Levels of Dietary ProteinJournal of Animal Science, 1959
- The Lysine Requirement for the Growth of SwineJournal of Nutrition, 1950