Effects of Combinations of Postbiotics and Phytobiotics on Growth Performance, Meat Quality, Gut Morphology, and Tibia Bone Characteristics in Broiler Chickens
الموضوعات :J.M.M. Doski 1 , K.Y. Kareem 2
1 - Department Animal Resource, College of Agricultural Engineering Science, Salahaddin University, Erbil, Iraq
2 - Department Animal Resource, College of Agricultural Engineering Science, Salahaddin University, Erbil, Iraq
الکلمات المفتاحية: thyme oil, broiler productivity, guts health, probiotics byproduct,
ملخص المقالة :
In the current study, the impact of the dietary combination of postbiotics and phytobiotics was examined on the growth performance, carcass characteristics, meat quality, gut morphology, and tibia bone characteristics of broiler chickens. This experiment was conducted in the Duhok government's private-sector poultry house for 35 days. The broiler chickens were allocated into eight treatment groups. Each treatment had four replicates, while each replicate had twelve birds. The treatment groups included T1= basal diet (negative control), T2= basal diet + 0.01% (w/w) Doxin 200 (positive control), T3= basal diet + 0.3 % (v/w) postbiotic, T4= basal diet + 0.3% black cumin oil (v/w), T5= basal diet + 0. 3% thyme oil (v/w), T6= basal diet + 0.15% postbiotic + 0.15% black cumin oil (v/w), T7= basal diet + 0.15% postbiotic + 0.15% thyme oil (v/w), T8= basal diet + 0.15% postbiotic + 0.075% black cumin oil + 0.075% thyme oil (v/w). According to the results, adding postbiotics and phytobiotics to broiler feed significantly increased weight growth, feed conversion ratio, and economic index, particularly in birds in the T7 group. The meat traits had improved nevertheless and were now in the normal range. Additionally, gut morphological characteristics had improved and, particularly in bird groups given T7, had demonstrated the greatest rate of villa height/crypt depth (Vh/Cd) ratio and absorptive surface area. In contrast to broiler-fed antibiotics, the characteristics of the tibia bone were enhanced by a combination of postbiotics and phytobiotics. The greatest prospective substitute for antibiotic growth promoters in broiler chicken is the combination of 0.3% postbiotics and phytobiotics (thyme oil) as new feed additives.
Abd El-Ghany W.A., Fouad H., Quesnell R. and Sakai L. (2022). The effect of a postbiotic produced by stabilized non-viable Lactobacilli on the health, growth performance, immunity, and gut status of colisepticaemic broiler chickens. Trop. Anim. Health Prod. 54, 286-295.
Abd El-Ghany W.A. (2020). Paraprobiotics and postbiotics: contemporary and promising natural antibiotics alternatives and their applications in the poultry field. Open Vet. J. 10(3), 323-330.
Abd El-Hack M.E., El-Saadony M.T., Salem H.M., El-Tahan A.M., Soliman M.M., Youssef G.B., Taha A.E., Soliman S.M., Ahmed A.E., El-kott A.F., Al Syaad K.M. and Swelum A.A. (2022). Alternatives to antibiotics for organic poultry production: Types, modes of action and impacts on bird's health and production. J. Poult. Sci., 101(4), 1-11.
Abdel-Hafeez H.M., Saleh E.S., Tawfeek S.S., Youssef I.M.A. and Abdel-Daim A.S. (2017). Effects of probiotic, prebiotic, and synbiotic with and without feed restriction on performance, hematological indices and carcass characteristics of broiler chickens. Asian-Australasian J. Anim. Sci. 30(5), 672-682.
Abdulla N.R., Mohd Zamri A.N., Sabow A.B., Kareem K.Y., Nurhazirah S., Ling F.H., Sazili A.Q. and Loh T.C. (2017). Physico-chemical properties of breast muscle in broiler chickens fed probiotics, antibiotics or antibiotic–probiotic mix. J. Appl. Anim. Res. 45, 64-70.
Aguilar-Toalá J., Garcia-Varela R., Garcia H., Mata-Haro V., González-Córdova A., Vallejo-Cordoba B. and Hernández-Mendoza A. (2018). Postbiotics: An evolving term within the functional foods field. Trends Food Sci. Technol. 75, 105-114.
Al-Khalaifa H., Al-Nasser A., Al-Surayee T., Al-Kandari S., Al-Enzi N., Al-Sharrah T., Ragheb G., Al-Qalaf S. and Mohammed A. (2019). Effect of dietary probiotics and prebiotics on the performance of broiler chickens. J. Poult. Sci. 98(10), 4465-4479.
Al-Qahtani M., Ahiwe E.U., Abdallh M.E., Chang'a E.P., Gausi H., Bedford M.R. and Iji P.A. (2021). Endogenous enzyme activities and tibia bone development of broiler chickens fed wheat-based diets supplemented with xylanase, β-glucanase and phytase. J. Anim. Biosci. 34(6), 1049-1060.
Aviagen. (2019). Ross 308: Broiler Performance Objectives and Nutrition Specifications. Aviagen Ltd., Newbridge, UK
Basit M.A., Kadir A.A., Loh T.C., Abdul Aziz S., Salleh A., Zakaria Z.A. and Banke Idris S. (2020). Comparative efficacy of selected phytobiotics with halquinol and tetracycline on gut morphology, ileal digestibility, cecal microbiota composition and growth performance in broiler chickens. Animals. 10(11), 2150-2161.
Behlül S. and Yusuf C. (2021). Effects of essential oils and their combinations added to broiler diets on the mineral contents of some tissues and bone breaking strength. J. Rocz. Nauk. Pols. Towarz. Zootech. 17(3), 59-69.
Danladi Y., Loh T.C., Foo H.L., Akit H., Md Tamrin N.A. and Naeem A.M. (2022). Effects of postbiotics and paraprobiotics as replacements for antibiotics on growth performance, carcass characteristics, small intestine histomorphology, immune status and hepatic growth gene expression in broiler chickens. Animls. 12(7), 917-925.
Durso L.M. and Cook K.L. (2014). Impacts of antibiotic use in agriculture: what are the benefits and risks? Curr. Opin. Microbiol. 19, 37-44.
Ferdous M.F., Arefin M.S., Rahman M.M., Ripon M.M. R., Rashid M.H., Sultana M.R., Hossain M.T., Ahammad M.U. and Rafiq K. (2019). Beneficial effects of probiotic and phytobiotic as growth promoter alternative to antibiotic for safe broiler production. J. Adv. Vet. Anim. Res. 6(3), 409-415.
Fuentes C.G.G., Orozco L.A.Z., Vicente J.L., Velasco X.H., Menconi A., Kuttappan V.A., Kallapura G., Latorre J., Layton S., Hargis B.M. and Téllez G. (2013). Effect of a lactic acid bacteria based probiotic, floramax-b11®, on performance, bone qualities, and morphometric analysis of broiler chickens: an economic analysis. Int. J. Poul. Sci., 12(6), 322-327.
Garcia R.G., Freitas L.W., Schwingel A.W., Farias R.M., Caldara F.R., Gabriel A.M.A., Graciano J.D., Komiyama C.M. and Almeida P. (2010). Incidence and physical properties of pse chicken meat in a commercial processing plant. Brazilian J. Poult. Sci. 12(4), 24-32.
Grashorn M.A. (2010). Use of phytobiotics in broiler nutrition – an alternative to infeed antibiotics? J. Anim. Feed Sci. 19(3), 338-347.
Hafeez A., Sohail M., Ahmad A., Shah M., Din S., Khan I., Shuiab M., Nasrullah S., W., Iqbal M. and Khan R.U. (2020). Selected herbal plants showing enhanced growth performance, ileal digestibility, bone strength and blood metabolites in broilers. J. Appl. Anim. Res. 48(1), 448-453.
Halliwell B. (2001). Role of free radicals in the neurodegenerative diseases therapeutic implications for antioxidant treatment. Drugs Aging. 18, 685-716.
Hayat M.N., Kaka U. and Sazili A.Q. (2021). Assessment of physicochemical characteristics and microbiological quality in broiler chicken breast muscle (pectoralis major) subjected to different temperatures and lengths of cold transportation. J. Foods. 10(4), 874-886.
Humam A.M., Loh T.C., Foo H.L., Samsudin A.A., Mustapha N.M., Zulkifli I. and Izuddin W.I. (2019). Effects of feeding different postbiotics produced by Lactobacillus plantarum on growth performance, carcass yield, intestinal morphology, gut microbiota composition, immune status, and growth gene expression in broilers under heat stress. Animals. 9(9), 644-657.
Humam A.M., Loh T.C., Foo H.L., Izuddin W.I., Awad E.A., Idrus Z., Samsudin A.A. and Mustapha N.M. (2020). Dietary supplementation of postbiotics mitigates adverse impacts of heat stress on antioxidant enzyme activity, total antioxidant, lipid peroxidation, physiological stress indicators, lipid profile and meat quality in broilers. Animals. 10(6), 982-991.
Hussein E.O.S., Ahmed S.H., Abudabos A.M., Aljumaah M.R., Alkhlulaifi M.M., Nassan M.A., Suliman G.M., Naiel M.A.E. and Swelum A.A. (2020a). Effect of antibiotic, phytobiotic and probiotic supplementation on growth, blood indices and intestine health in broiler chicks challenged with clostridium perfringens. Animals. 10(3), 507-514.
Hussein E.O.S., Shamseldein H.A., Alaeldein M.A., Gamaleldin M.S., Mohamed E.A., Ayman A.S. and Abdullah N.A. (2020b). Ameliorative effects of antibiotic-, probiotic- and phytobiotic-supplemented diets on the performance, intestinal health, carcass traits, and meat quality of clostridium perfringens-infected broilers. Animals. 10, 669-676.
Javid M.A., Masood S., Zaneb H., Rehman H.U., Nazir M.M., Waqas M.Y., Asif M., Basit M.A., Abbas G. and Sufyan A.B. (2022). Effect of dietary growth promoter supplementations on the serum biochemistry and morphometric characteristics of tibia bone in broiler chicken. Brazilian J. Poult. Sci. 24(4), 201-212.
Kareem K.Y., Foo H.L., Loo T.C., Ooi M.F. and Asmara S.A. (2014). Inhibitory activity of postbiotic produced by strains of Lactobacillus plantarum using reconstituted media supplemented with inulin. Gut Pathog. 14(6), 23-31.
Kareem K.Y., Loo T.C., Foo H.L., Asmara S.A., Akit H., Abdulla N.R. and Ooi M.F. (2015). Carcass, meat and bone quality of broiler chickens fed with postbiotic and prebiotic combinations. Int. J. Prob. Preb. 10(1), 23-30.
Kareem K.Y., Loh T.C., Foo H.L. and Asmara S.A. (2016). Effects of dietary postbiotic and inulin on growth performance, IGF1 and GHR mRNA expression, faecal microbiota and volatile fatty acids in broilers. BMC Vet. Res. 12, 163-171.
Kareem K.Y. (2020). Effect of different levels of postbiotic on growth performance, intestinal microbiota count and volatile fatty acids on quail. Plant Arch. 2, 2885-2887.
Kareem K.Y., Loh T.C. and Foo H.L. (2021). Effect of new feed additive on growth performance and immunoglobulin of broilers. IOP Conf. Ser. Earth Environ. Sci. 761, 12110-12119.
Kisielinski K., Willis S., Prescher A., Klosterhalfen B. and Schumpelick V. (2002). A simple new method to calculate small intestine absorptive surface in the rat. Clin. Exp. Med. 2(3), 131-135.
Loh T.C., Choe D.W., Foo H.L., Sazili A.Q. and Bejo M.H. (2014). Effects of feeding different postbiotic metabolite combinations produced by Lactobacillus plantarum strains on egg quality and production performance, faecal parameters and plasma cholesterol in laying hens. BMC Vet. Res. 5(10), 149-158.
Martel J., Ojcius D.M., Ko Y.F. and Young J.D. (2020). Phytochemicals as prebiotics and biological stress inducers. Trends Biochem. Sci. 45(6), 462-471.
Meyer M.M., Johnson A.K. and Bobeck E.A. (2019). A novel environmental enrichment device improved broiler performance without sacrificing bird physiological or environmental quality measures. Poult. Sci. 98(11), 5247-5256.
Mohammed M.Y. and Kareem K.Y. (2022). A comparison study of probiotic, postbiotic and prebiotic on performance and meat quality of broilers. Tikrit J. Agric. Sci. 22(4), 24-32.
NRC. (1994). Nutrient Requirements of Poultry, 9th Rev. Ed. National Academy Press, Washington, DC., USA.
Orlowski S., Flees J., Greene E.S., Ashley D., Lee S.O., Yang F.L., Owens C.M., Kidd M., Anthony N. and Dridi S. (2018). Effects of phytogenic additives on meat quality traits in broiler chickens. J. Anim. Sci. 96(9), 3757-3767.
Peng Q., Zeng X., Zhu J., Wang S., Liu X., Hou C., Thacker P. and Qiao S. (2016). Effects of dietary Lactobacillus plantarum B1 on growth performance, intestinal microbiota, and short chain fatty acid profiles in broiler chickens. J. Poult. Sci. 95(4), 893-900.
Popović S., Puvača N., Peulić I., Kostadinović P. and Đuragić O. (2020). The usefulness of dietary essential oils mixture supplementation on quality aspect of poultry meat. J. Agron. Technol. Engin. Manag. 2(6), 335-343.
Ramiah S.K., Zulkifli I., Rahim N.A., Ebrahimi M. and Meng G.Y. (2014). Effects of two herbal extracts and virginiamycin supplementation on growth performance, intestinal microflora population and fatty acid composition in broiler chickens. Asian-Australasian J. Anim. Sci. 27(3), 375-382.
Rine R.C., Shovon L.S., Pravas C.R., Azraf A.M., Anwar H. and Iqbal K.J. (2021). Prebiotics, probiotics and postbiotics for sustainable poultry production. World's Poult. Sci. J. 77, 825-882.
Ristic M. and Damme K. (2013). Significance of pH-value for meat quality of broilers: influence of breed lines. Vet. Glasnik. 67(1), 67-73.
SAS Institute. (2012). SAS®/STAT Software, Release 9.1. SAS Institute, Inc., Cary, NC. USA.
Shazali N., Foo H.L., Loh T.C., Choe D.W. and Abdul Rahim R. (2014). Prevalence of antibiotic resistance in lactic acid bacteria isolated from the faeces of broiler chicken in Malaysia. J. Gut Pathog. 6, 1-9.
Tabashsum Z., Alvarado-Martinez Z., Wall M.J., Aditya A. and Biswas D. (2023). Combined effect of metabolites produced by a modified Lactobacillus casei and berry phenolic extract on Campylobacter and microbiome in chicken cecum contents. J. Food Sci. 88(6), 2583-2594.
Tang X., Liu X. and Liu H. (2021). Effects of dietary probiotic (Bacillus subtilis) supplementation on carcass traits, meat quality, amino acid, and fatty acid profile of broiler chickens. J. Front. Vet. Sci. 8, 767802-767811.
Yitbarek M.B. (2015). Phytogenics as feed additives in poultry production: a review. Int. J. Extensive Res. 3, 49-60.
Zangana B.S.R. and Mohamad M.J. (2016). The effect of early feeding with three types of probiotic on histology characteristics and intestinal microflora of gut broiler. Iraqi Poult. Sci. J. 10(1), 59-69.
Zuidhof M.J., Schneider B.L., Carney V.L., Korver D.R. and Robinson F.E. (2014). Growth, efficiency, and yield of commercial broilers from 1957, 1978, and 2005. Poult. Sci. 93(12), 2970-2982.