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Identifying Dietary Timing of Organic Trace Minerals to Reduce the Incidence of Osteomyelitis Lameness in Broiler Chickens Using the Aerosol Transmission Model.

Khawla AlharbiAndi AsnayantiAnh Dang Trieu DoRuvindu PereraLayla Al-MitibAbdulkarim ShwaniMarco A RebolloMichael T KiddAdnan Ali Khalaf Alrubaye
Published in: Animals : an open access journal from MDPI (2024)
Our prior research demonstrated a 20% to 25% reduction in bacterial chondronecrosis with osteomyelitis (BCO) lameness in broilers with organic Zn, Mn, and Cu (Availa ® ZMC) supplementation. Expanding on this, we investigated the optimal timing for Availa ® ZMC feeding to mitigate BCO lameness and reduce feed additive costs in the poultry industry. In this study, we compared the application of 0.15% Availa ® ZMC for 56 days, the first 28 days, and the last 28 days. The experimental design was a randomized block design involving 1560 one-day-old chicks distributed across two wire-floor pens as BCO source infection and four treatment groups with six replicates. The source of BCO infection exhibited a cumulative lameness incidence of 83%, whereas the negative control group showed a 77% cumulative incidence of lameness ( p = 0.125). Administering 0.15% of Availa ® ZMC during the initial 28 d resulted in a 41.3% reduction in BCO incidence, significantly different from the supplementation during the last 28 d ( p < 0.05). However, this reduction did not differ substantially ( p > 0.05) from the 56d application period. Hence, administering 0.15% Availa ® ZMC during the first four weeks emerges as the optimal timing protocol, providing a defense against lameness comparable to the continuous supplementation throughout the complete production duration. Implementing this feeding approach reduces the cost of feed additive, promotes the health of skeletal bones, and effectively protects against BCO lameness in broilers, offering a valuable consideration for producers seeking optimal outcomes in the poultry industry.
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