AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to replace fishmeal in chicken diets with housefly larvae at varying rates and forms (dried vs. fresh) to determine the impacts on growth and meat quality.
  • A total of 165 local chickens were raised under five different diet treatments, with chickens being evaluated for meat characteristics after 14 weeks.
  • Results showed that while growth performance remained unaffected, certain meat qualities improved with higher larvae substitution, suggesting that housefly larvae can effectively substitute up to 50% of fishmeal in local chicken diets.

Article Abstract

The purpose of this work was to study the effects of substitution of fishmeal by housefly larvae at different rates and different physical states in the diet of local chickens. Five diets consisted of LFD, 25DL, 50DL, 25FL and 50FL, respectively, larval-free, 25%-dried-larvae, 50%-dried-larvae, 25%-fresh-larvae and 50%-fresh-larvae diet, in which 0, 25 and 50% of fishmeal was replaced by dried and fresh larvae, was formulated. A total of 165 local chickens of three weeks old, divided into 15 boxes in batches of 11 animals were raised. The experiment consists of three replications of five treatments. At 14 weeks of age, sixty chickens were slaughtered. Butchery skills and sensory characteristics were evaluated. Thus, a small variation of the ultimate pH from 5.63 to 5.55 between the different types of meat, and a carcass yield around 66%, was recorded. Any effects of substitution rate and physical state of housefly larvae on growth performance was not observed. Feet and proventriculus percentages increased in chickens fed 25% substitution. Liver and spleen percentage, and redder breast meat, increased in chicken fed dried larvae. Yellowness of the breast, thigh-and-drumstick meat and juiciness increased with 50% substitution. There is need of an investigation for liver and spleen enlargement and housefly larvae containing pigments. Thus, housefly larvae up to 50% substitution can be a suitable alternative to fishmeal in local chicken diets.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9606875PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/vetsci9100553DOI Listing

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