Abstract:
An experiment was conducted to determine the dietary digestible lysine requirement
of male and female broiler chickens (Arian) during the period from 6 to 21 days posthatching.
An amino acid-fortified basal diet containing corn and soybean meal as intact
protein sources provided 20 % CP, and 3200 kcal AMEn / kg. In this experiment 150 male
and 150 female chicks were allocated on the basis of BW to 12 treatments in a factorial
arrangement (two sexes at six digestible lysine levels) with five replications of five chicks
each in a completely randomized design (CRD). The digestible lysine levels fed were 0.85,
0.95, 1.05, 1.15, 1.25 and 1.35%. The growth rate and feed efficiency of birds fed the basal
diet fortified with a surfeit level of l-Lysine-HCl were equal to those of birds fed a cornsoybean
meal positive control diet. Average body-weight gain (ABWG) and gain: feed
(GF) responded quadratically (P<0.05) to incremental dietary lysine addition. Subjecting
the growth data to broken-line analysis indicated that the digestible lysine requirement
for maximum body weight gain was 1.075% for males and 1.049% for females. The lysine
requirement for maximum feed efficiency was 1.179% for males and 1.149% for females.
Male chicks required a higher level of dietary lysine than females for both maximal
ABWG and GF. Regardless of sex, 8.8% more digestible lysine (percentage of diet) was
required for maximal GF than that needed for maximal ABWG