2009
DOI: 10.4321/s0004-05922009000300009
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Poedeiras alimentadas com diferentes níveis de energia e oleo de soja na ração

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Cited by 2 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…ME levels did not influence egg weight, as previously reported by Costa et al (2009). Relative to feed conversion ratio, the highest CP and ME levels generated the best results.…”
Section: Crude Protein and Metabolizable Energy Levels For Layers Reasupporting
confidence: 69%
“…ME levels did not influence egg weight, as previously reported by Costa et al (2009). Relative to feed conversion ratio, the highest CP and ME levels generated the best results.…”
Section: Crude Protein and Metabolizable Energy Levels For Layers Reasupporting
confidence: 69%
“…There was no influence of the treatments on egg production (Table 5). Similar results were also obtained by , Wu et al (2007), Jalal et al (2007) and Costa et al (2009), who fed layers with different ME levels and concluded that the dietary energy level did not cause any significant effect (P>0.05) on egg production. However, Araújo & Peixoto (2005) observed instead a reduction in egg production (P<0.05) as the dietary energy level increased, whereas Valkonen et al (2008) obtained an increase in egg production with increasing dietary energy levels; however, the latter worked with energy levels lower than those used in the present study and those recommended in the literature (2345 to 2629 kcal ME/kg feed).…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 78%
“…There was no influence of energy and oil levels on egg mass, as previously observed by Jalal et al (2007), Valkonen et al (2008) and Costa et al (2009), who fed layers with diets containing different energy levels and also did not find any effect on egg mass. However, Wu et al (2007) observed an increase in egg mass as the dietary ME level increased.…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 68%
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