AI Article Synopsis

  • The study assessed the impact of a phytogenic feed additive called Digestarom on the growth, feed intake, and health of finishing steers over a 110-day feeding trial with 120 Angus × Charolais crossbred steers.
  • The steers were split into three dietary groups, containing varying levels of Digestarom, while their feed intake and weight were monitored regularly, showing a trend of improved weight gain with higher Digestarom levels.
  • Although the addition of Digestarom did not significantly change feed intake or liver abscess rates, it did show a quadratic effect on muscle area and a linear decrease in dressing percentage as the level of the additive increased.

Article Abstract

The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effect of a phytogenic feed additive (Digestarom [DA]; Biomin, Getzersdorf, Austria) on growth performance, feed intake, carcass traits, fatty acid composition, and liver abscesses of finishing steers. One hundred twenty Angus × Charolais crossbred steers (488 ± 26.5 kg) were used in a 110-d feeding experiment. Steers were blocked by weight and randomly assigned to 12 pens with 10 steers per pen. Each pen was allocated to one of three diets. Each diet contained 86.5% barley, 10.0% barley silage, and 3.5% vitamin and mineral supplement on a dry matter (DM) basis. The diets contained 0, 0.05, and 0.1 g DA/kg complete diet (DM basis), to achieve average daily DA intakes of 0 (control), 0.5 (LowDA), and 1.0 g (HighDA) per steer. Diets were prepared once daily and provided ad libitum. Two pens per treatment were equipped to record individual feed intake behavior. Steers were weighed every 28 d and carcass traits and liver scores were recorded at slaughter. Dry matter intake (average: 9.34 kg/d) did not differ ( > 0.05) among diets. Average daily gain tended to increase linearly as DA increased (control: 1.82; LowDA: 1.87; and HighDA: 1.95 kg/d; < 0.09), but gain:feed ratio was not affected. Supplementation of DA affected longissimus muscle area quadratically ( = 0.05) with the largest area observed for LowDA. However, dressing percentage decreased linearly in response to increasing level of DA ( < 0.01). Total abscessed livers were not affected, whereas proportion of severe liver abscesses was numerically lower with DA (30.8% and 42.5% for LowDA and HighDA) compared to the control (50%).

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7200540PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/tas/txz109DOI Listing

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