Effects of dietary calcium to phosphorus ratio and addition of phytase on growth performance of nursery pigs.
暂无分享,去创建一个
J. DeRouchey | M. Tokach | R. Goodband | S. Dritz | J. Bergstrom | J. Woodworth | M. Gonçalves | F. Wu
[1] C. Pomar,et al. Consequences of dietary calcium and phosphorus depletion and repletion feeding sequences on growth performance and body composition of growing pigs. , 2017, Animal : an international journal of animal bioscience.
[2] C. Parsons,et al. Inclusion of excess dietary calcium in diets for 100- to 130-kg growing pigs reduces feed intake and daily gain if dietary phosphorus is at or below the requirement. , 2017, Journal of animal science.
[3] J. DeRouchey,et al. 119 Standardized total tract digestible phosphorus requirement of 11- to 25-kg pigs. , 2017 .
[4] S. Hay,et al. Antibiotic resistance: mitigation opportunities in livestock sector development. , 2017, Animal : an international journal of animal bioscience.
[5] H. Stein,et al. Requirement for digestible calcium by eleven- to twenty-five-kilogram pigs as determined by growth performance, bone ash concentration, calcium and phosphorus balances, and expression of genes involved in transport of calcium in intestinal and kidney cells. , 2016, Journal of animal science.
[6] J. DeRouchey,et al. Fact sheets – comparing phytase sources for pigs and effects of superdosing phytase on growth performance of nursery and finishing pigs , 2016 .
[7] A. Awati,et al. Phytase in non-ruminant animal nutrition: a critical review on phytase activities in the gastrointestinal tract and influencing factors , 2014, Journal of the science of food and agriculture.
[8] D. Sauvant,et al. Meta-analysis of phosphorus utilization by growing pigs: effect of dietary phosphorus, calcium and exogenous phytase. , 2012, Animal : an international journal of animal bioscience.
[9] G. Cromwell,et al. Concentration of dietary calcium supplied by calcium carbonate does not affect the apparent total tract digestibility of calcium, but decreases digestibility of phosphorus by growing pigs. , 2011, Journal of animal science.
[10] W. Horwitz,et al. Official methods of analysis of AOAC International , 2010 .
[11] V. Ravindran,et al. Consequences of calcium interactions with phytate and phytase for poultry and pigs , 2009 .
[12] R. Heaney,et al. Calcium Effects on Phosphorus Absorption: Implications for the Prevention and Co-Therapy of Osteoporosis , 2002, Journal of the American College of Nutrition.
[13] T. Crenshaw. 10 Calcium, Phosphorus, Vitamin D, and Vitamin K in Swine Nutrition , 2000 .
[14] D. Ledoux,et al. Lowering the dietary calcium to total phosphorus ratio increases phosphorus utilization in low-phosphorus corn-soybean meal diets supplemented with microbial phytase for growing-finishing pigs. , 1998, Journal of animal science.
[15] E. Kornegay,et al. Adverse effects of wide calcium:phosphorus ratios on supplemental phytase efficacy for weanling pigs fed two dietary phosphorus levels. , 1996, Journal of animal science.
[16] D. Mahan,et al. Effect of Various Calcium:Phosphorus Ratios at Low and High Dietary Phosphorus for Starter, Grower and Finishing Swine , 1986 .
[17] Board on Agriculture,et al. Nutrient requirements of swine , 1964 .