Sodium metabisulphite enhances energy utilisation in broiler chickens offered sorghum-based diets with five different grain varieties

•Inclusions of a reducing agent (sodium metabisulphite) in broiler diets based on five different sorghums were evaluated.•3.50g/kg sodium metabisulphite increased AME by 0.34MJ (12.31 versus 11.97MJ/kg) in two similar feeding studies.•3.50g/kg sodium metabisulphite also significantly increased N-cor...

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Published in:Animal feed science and technology Vol. 219; pp. 159 - 174
Main Authors: Truong, Ha H., Neilson, Karlie A., McInerney, Bernard V., Khoddami, Ali, Roberts, Thomas H., Liu, Sonia Yun, Selle, Peter H.
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier B.V 01-09-2016
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Summary:•Inclusions of a reducing agent (sodium metabisulphite) in broiler diets based on five different sorghums were evaluated.•3.50g/kg sodium metabisulphite increased AME by 0.34MJ (12.31 versus 11.97MJ/kg) in two similar feeding studies.•3.50g/kg sodium metabisulphite also significantly increased N-corrected AME by 0.42MJ (11.85 versus 11.43MJ/kg).•Grain sorghum holding and breakdown viscosities were positively correlated with AME and AMEn to significant extents. The reducing agent, sodium metabisulphite, was included in sorghum-based broiler diets at 0.00, 1.75 and 3.50g/kg from 7 to 28days post-hatch. In Experiment 1 two sorghum varieties (MP, JM) were evaluated and three sorghums (HP, Tiger, HFQ) in Experiment 2; the two experiments were separate but very similar. The five sorghums were extensively characterised and all five diets contained 620g/kg sorghum and were formulated to be nutritionally equivalent. In both studies, each dietary treatment was offered to six replicate cages (6 birds per cage) for a combined total of 540 male Ross 308 chicks. The effects of sodium metabisulphite on growth performance, nutrient utilisation, apparent digestibility coefficients of starch and protein (N) and starch and protein digestive dynamics were determined. Sodium metabisulphite significantly enhanced energy utilisation. Across both experiments, 3.50g/kg sodium metabisulphite increased AME on a dry matter basis by 0.34MJ from an average of 11.97–12.31MJ/kg and similarly increased N-corrected AME by 0.42MJ from 11.43 to 11.85MJ/kg. Sorghum variety by sodium metabisulphite interactions were not observed for energy utilisation (AME, ME:GE ratios, AMEn) parameters but this was not always the case for other parameters, which indicates that diverse sorghums respond differently to sodium metabisulphite. Consideration is given to the basis for these variable responses to sodium metabisulphite because of its dual modes of action (reducing disulphide cross-linkages, depolymerising starch polysaccharides) and the possible relevance of RVA starch pasting profiles of grain sorghum to feed grain quality.
ISSN:0377-8401
1873-2216
DOI:10.1016/j.anifeedsci.2016.06.016