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Influence of a Commercial Synbiotic Administered In Ovo and In-Water on Broiler Chicken Performance and Meat Quality.

Siria TavanielloDavide De MarzoMarek BednarczykMarisa PalazzoSanije ZejnelhoxhaMengjun WuMeng PengKatarzyna StadnickaGiuseppe Maiorano
Published in: Foods (Basel, Switzerland) (2023)
The present study aimed to test the synbiotic PoultryStar ® sol US delivered in ovo to evaluate its effect on hatchability, productive performance and meat quality, compared to its post-hatch administration in water. On the twelfth day of embryonic incubation, 1200 fertile eggs were divided into synbiotic groups injected with 2 mg/embryo (T1) and 3 mg/embryo (T2), a saline group injected with physiological saline and an uninjected control group (C). After hatching, 120 male chicks/group were reared and chicks from the saline group were supplemented with the synbiotic via drinking water (T3). Hatchability was low in both T1 and T2 groups. Growth performance was not affected by the treatments. However, in the second rearing phase (15-36 days), birds from the C and T3 groups were heavier than T1 birds, due to a higher feed intake and daily weight gain. Neither route of synbiotic administration influenced final body weight (at 56 days), weight and yield of the carcass or commercial cuts. Physico-chemical properties, total lipid, cholesterol and fatty acid composition of breast muscle were not affected by the treatments. Considering its exploratory nature, this study has raised many questions that need further investigation, such as the bioactive combination and the effect on embryonic development.
Keyphrases
  • weight gain
  • drinking water
  • body weight
  • fatty acid
  • physical activity
  • birth weight
  • weight loss
  • skeletal muscle
  • quality improvement
  • risk assessment