Title of article :
The effect of cereal type and enzyme addition on pig performance, intestinal microflora, and ammonia and odour emissions
Abstract :
Two 2 £ 2 factorial experiments were conducted to investigate the interaction between cereal type (wheat v. barley) and
exogenous enzyme supplementation (with or without) on odour and ammonia emissions (experiment 1) and growth performance
(experiment 2) in grower-finisher pigs. The enzyme supplement used contained endo-1, 3 (4) - b- glucanase (EC 3.2.1.6) and
endo-1, 4 - b-xylanase (E.C 3.2.1.8). The diets were formulated to contain similar levels of net energy (9.8 MJ/kg) and lysine
(10.0 g/kg). The experimental treatments were as follows: (1) wheat-based diet, (2) wheat-based diet containing a b-glucanase
and b-xylanase mixed enzyme supplement, (3) barley-based diet and (4) barley-based diet containing a b-glucanase and bxylanase
mixed enzyme supplement. In experiment 1, the diets were offered to the pigs for 23 days in sealed pens (eight pigs per
pen) and this was repeated four times (n¼ 4). Odour and ammonia emissions were measured on days 9, 11, 14, 16, 21 and 23
of each replicate period. Odour samples were collected in 20-l Nalophan bags and analysed for odour concentration using an
ECOMA Yes/No Olfactometer. Ammonia concentrations in the ventilation air were measured using Dra¨ ger tubes. In experiment 2,
220 pigs were group fed in mixed sex pens using single-space feeders (11 pigs per feeder, six boars and five gilts) (n¼ 5). There
was a cereal £ enzyme interaction in odour emission rates, ammonia emissions and selected microbial populations in the caecum
and colon (P , 0.05). The addition of an enzyme supplement to the barley-based diet increased both odour and ammonia
emission, however the addition of an enzyme to the wheat-based diet decreased ammonia emission rates and had no effect on
odour emission. Pigs offered the unsupplemented barley-based diet had a significantly (P , 0.05) lower population of
Enterobacteriaceae spp. and a higher population of Bifidobacteria spp. compared with enzyme-supplemented barley diets.
However, there was no effect of enzyme supplementation in wheat-based diets. In the performance experiment, neither cereal
type nor enzyme inclusion had an effect on pig performance or carcass characteristics. In conclusion, the inclusion of an enzyme
mix to barley-based diets increased odour and ammonia emissions, while the addition of an enzyme mix to wheat-based diets
decreased ammonia emissions.
Keywords :
mmonia , Cereals , enzymes , pig , Odour