One thousand male Hubbard chicks were used in a 21-d study (10 birds per battery cage) to determine relative biological availability of phosphorus in seven samples of commercial dicalcium phosphate, expected to contain variable amounts of monocalcium phosphate. Five samples were from established producers in Brazil and two from the U.S. Pure calcium phosphate dibasic dihydrate was used as the reference standard. Phosphates were added to the corn-soybean basal diet (22.5% CP; 0.4% total phosphorus) to provide 0.1, 0.2, and 0.3% supplemental phosphorus. The calcium level was 1.0% for all diets. Left tibias were removed for bone ash (BA) and bone strength (BS) determination. Body weight, feed intake (FI), BA, BS, and plasma phosphorus increased (P < 0.01) and plasma calcium and alkaline phosphatase decreased (P < 0.01) with increasing dietary phosphorus regardless of source. The availability of phosphorus for each test phosphate was determined by slope ratio, with BW, BA, and BS regressed on phosphorus added within each phosphorus source. A relative biological value (RBV) was calculated based on BW, BA, and gain:feed ratio. Availability based on BW ranged from 97.07 to 110.41%. When BA was the criterion, values were 80.32 to 107.84% and for BS were 79.34 to 110.52%. The RBV ranged from 97.55 to 100.60%. Phosphate sources did not vary greatly in phosphorus availability. Overall phosphorus availability averages were higher for BW (103%) and RBV (99%) and lowest for BA (96%) and BS (94%).
Seven samples of commercial dicalcium phosphate, expected to contain variable amounts of monocalcium phosphate, from five established producers in Brazil and two in the United States, were evaluated and compared with a purified grade calcium phosphate dibasic dihydrate used as a reference standard. All samples were submitted to a wide range of tests at seven laboratories. Each determination was performed at least at two different laboratories, except for moisture, insoluble residue, loss on ignition, and x-ray diffraction assays, obtained from one single laboratory. All phosphate samples studied were in compliance with the manufacturer's levels of guarantee, except for three samples that were slightly out of specification (Ca, P, and F). Particle size patterns were variable, allowing for a classification of two products as "coarse", three as "fine", and three as "irregular". Phosphorus solubility in 2% citric acid ranged from 85.9 to 97.6%, pH from 3.2 to 6.1, and apparent density from 572 to 967 g/L. Atomic absorption or plasma emission spectrometry concentrations (average parts per million) for Al (3,200), As (10), B (14), Ba (165), Bi (< .1), Cd (6), Cr (57), Co (11), Cu (28), Fe (7,515), Hg (< .2), Mg (11,300), Mn (367), Mo (6), Ni (25), Pb (17), Se (< .5), Sb (1.3), Th (19), U (51), V (134), W (< 5), and Zn (152) were safe for all phosphates as compared to NRC standards. X-ray diffraction detected CaCO3 and impurities for all commercial samples, dolomite for three phosphates. Monocalcium phosphate was found in four samples. Aluminum salts present were identified as the low solubility, low toxicity silicates, and phosphates.
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