Note on the effects of protein concentration on responses to dietary lysine by chicks
- 1 June 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in British Poultry Science
- Vol. 31 (2) , 255-260
- https://doi.org/10.1080/00071669008417255
Abstract
1. This paper gives further analyses of data from previously reported trials in which chicks were fed diets with protein concentrations ranging from 140 to 280 g/kg diet, with the lysine content varied at each protein concentration. 2. Alternative methods of estimating the lysine requirement, at each concentration of protein, are investigated. 3. Although these methods produce rather different estimates of requirement, they do not change the conclusion that the lysine needed for maximum growth or maximum efficiency of food utilisation is a linear function of dietary protein concentration throughout the range from 140 to 280 g crude protein/kg. 4. It is concluded that lysine requirements for growing chicks should be specified as a proportion of the protein and not as a proportion of the diet.This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- Dietary interactions influencing amino acid utilisation by poultryWorld's Poultry Science Journal, 1988
- Effects of protein concentration on responses to dietary lysine by chicksBritish Poultry Science, 1987
- Evaluation of a diet dilution technique for measuring the response of broiler chickens to increasing concentrations of lysineBritish Poultry Science, 1985
- THE INTERPRETATION OF RESPONSE DATA FROM ANIMAL FEEDING TRIALSPublished by Elsevier ,1983
- Response of broiler chickens to well‐balanced protein mixturesBritish Poultry Science, 1982
- A model for the description and prediction of the response of laying hens to amino acid intakeBritish Poultry Science, 1973
- Amino acid interactions in chick nutritionBritish Poultry Science, 1970
- Effects of ingestion of disproportionate amounts of amino acids.Physiological Reviews, 1970