2024
DOI: 10.3389/fvets.2024.1366314
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Effects of organic trace minerals chelated with oligosaccharides on growth performance, blood parameters, slaughter performance and meat quality in sheep

Runze Zhang,
Manlin Wei,
Jianqun Zhou
et al.

Abstract: The present study assessed the effects of oligosaccharide-chelated organic trace minerals (OTM) on the growth performance, digestive enzyme activity, blood parameters, slaughter performance, and meat quality indexes of mutton sheep. A total of 60 East Ujumuqin × small-tailed Han crossbred mutton sheep were assigned to two groups (10 duplicates per group) by body weight (26.12 ± 3.22 kg) according to a completely randomized design. Compared to the CON group, the results of the OTM group showed: (1) no significa… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…In the experiment, the substitution of 5-10% soybean meal with ZBM significantly improved the ADG and ADFI of broilers, which supports the feasibility of using ZBM in broiler diets. On the other hand, slaughtering performance is a crucial indicator for evaluating the quality of meat from livestock and poultry, providing insights into the distribution of different tissue parts in the overall mass and reveals variations in nutrient deposition among these parts [28,29]. The presence of excessive abdominal fat in broilers has a direct impact on meat processing, resulting in lower slaughter rates and reduced consumer interest, thus affecting economic profitability [30,31].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the experiment, the substitution of 5-10% soybean meal with ZBM significantly improved the ADG and ADFI of broilers, which supports the feasibility of using ZBM in broiler diets. On the other hand, slaughtering performance is a crucial indicator for evaluating the quality of meat from livestock and poultry, providing insights into the distribution of different tissue parts in the overall mass and reveals variations in nutrient deposition among these parts [28,29]. The presence of excessive abdominal fat in broilers has a direct impact on meat processing, resulting in lower slaughter rates and reduced consumer interest, thus affecting economic profitability [30,31].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%