The effects of early and late maturity on the protein requirements of pullets

Abstract
Growing pullets were exposed to two light patterns which caused a difference in sexual maturity of 5 weeks. From 28 to 38 weeks of age they were fed diets containing crude protein levels of 7.0, 8.5, 10.0, 11.5, 13.0 and 14.5 per cent. Yellow maize provided 45 per cent and soyabean meal 55 per cent of the protein in all six diets. Rate of lay, egg weight and body weight were greater in the late maturing flock than in the early flock at the start of the assay and throughout the assay period. The late maturing pullets required more protein to reach and maintain their maximum potential than the early birds, presumably because their potential output was greater. The late birds showed a diminishing but continued response to protein up to the highest level fed (14.5 per cent corresponding to 23 g. protein per bird day). The early maturing pullets showed no response to dietary protein levels beyond 11.5 per cent and their estimated protein requirement was about 16 g. per bird day. When limiting amounts of protein were fed (7.0–10.0 per cent of the diet) the two flocks achieved similar levels of egg output. In both flocks and throughout the assay, body weight and egg weight fell at the two lowest levels and increased at the three highest levels of protein. It is concluded that the protein requirements of early maturing and late maturing flocks of pullets may differ, but only in a way which corresponds directly with their different potential outputs. In the late flock, which had the higher protein requirement, excellent production was obtained with a diet containing 14½ per cent crude protein all of which came from vegetable sources.

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