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ALLEVIATION OF CHRONIC HEAT STRESS IN BROILERS BY DIETARY
SUPPLEMENTATION OF NOVEL FEED ADDITIVE COMBINATIONS

مؤلف البحث
Saad I. Al-Sultan, Sherief M. Abdel-Raheem1, Sherief M.S. Abd-Allah,
Abobakr M. Edris
ملخص البحث

Abstract: Heat stress causes economic losses via decreasing feed intake, nutrient digestion,
weight gain, feed conversion, immunity, carcass quality and increasing mortality
in broilers. The aim of the study was to assess the ability of dietary additive combinations
to ameliorate the detrimental effect caused by chronic heat stress (32 ± 2ºC for 24 h per
d) on performance, carcass traits, metabolic status and economic efficiency of broiler
chickens. A total of 420, one-day old Cobb-500 broiler chicks were assigned into seven
treatment groups (n=60) of five replicates. Each replicate contained 12 unsexed chicks.
The control groups did not receive any supplementation to the basal diet (thermoneutral
control (TNC) and heat stress control (HSC) groups). The other groups received control
diet supplemented with 1 % cumin plus 1 % turmeric powders (T1); 1.5 g/kg potassium
chloride plus 2 g/kg sodium bicarbonate (T2); 1000 ppm propolis plus 15000 IU vitamin
A (T3); 1200 ppb chromium plus 500 ppm vitamin C (T4) ; 1200 ppm betaine plus 500
ppm vitamin E (T5). The results indicated that at 42 d of age, all dietary additive combinations
improved the growth performance indices, carcass traits, concentrations of serum
antioxidant enzyme biomarkers, stress biomarkers and economic efficiency in comparison
to HSC group. Based on the obtained results, it could be concluded that dietary supplementation
with betaine and vitamin E followed by chromium and vitamin C combinations
offers a good management practice for alleviating heat stress related depression in
the performance of broiler chickens

مجلة البحث
Abstract: Heat stress causes economic losses via decreasing feed intake, nutrient digestion,
weight gain, feed conversion, immunity, carcass quality and increasing mortality
in broilers. The aim of the study was to assess the ability of dietary additive
المشارك في البحث
الناشر
Veterinary Faculty, Slovenia
تصنيف البحث
1
عدد البحث
56 (Suppl 22)
موقع البحث
DOI 10.26873/SVR-766-2019
سنة البحث
2019
صفحات البحث
269–79