Effect of dietary organic zinc sources on growth performance, incidence of diarrhoea, serum and tissue zinc concentrations, and intestinal morphology in growing rabbits

This study was conducted to evaluate the effect of dietary organic zinc (Zn) sources on growth performance, the incidence of diarrhoea, serum and tissue Zn concentration, and intestinal morphology in growing rabbits. A total of 120 New Zealand White rabbits aged 35 d and with an initial body weight...

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Main Authors: J.Y. Yan, G.W. Zhang, C. Zhang, L. Tang, S.Y. Kuang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universitat Politècnica de València 2017-03-01
Series:World Rabbit Science
Subjects:
Online Access:http://polipapers.upv.es/index.php/wrs/article/view/5770
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spelling doaj-17c6533a7bf742bb9414ab9f3d6c3a762020-11-25T03:24:48ZengUniversitat Politècnica de ValènciaWorld Rabbit Science1257-50111989-88862017-03-01251434910.4995/wrs.2017.57705228Effect of dietary organic zinc sources on growth performance, incidence of diarrhoea, serum and tissue zinc concentrations, and intestinal morphology in growing rabbitsJ.Y. Yan0G.W. Zhang1C. Zhang2L. Tang3S.Y. Kuang4Sichuan Academy of Animal ScienceSouthwest UniversitySichuan Academy of Animal ScienceSichuan Academy of Animal ScienceSichuan Academy of Animal ScienceThis study was conducted to evaluate the effect of dietary organic zinc (Zn) sources on growth performance, the incidence of diarrhoea, serum and tissue Zn concentration, and intestinal morphology in growing rabbits. A total of 120 New Zealand White rabbits aged 35 d and with an initial body weight of 755±15 g, were randomly divided into 4 treatment groups for a 49 d feeding trial. Dietary treatments were designed with different Zn supplements as follows: (1) Control group: 80 mg/kg Zn as ZnSO<sub>4</sub>; (2) ZnLA group: 80 mg/kg Zn as Zn lactate; (3) ZnMet group: 80 mg/kg Zn as Zn methionine; (4) ZnGly group: 80 mg/kg Zn as Zn glycine. The results showed that, when compared with rabbits fed ZnSO<sub>4</sub>, supplementation with ZnLA improved (P<0.05) growth performance and led to a lower (P<0.01) incidence of diarrhoea. ZnLA supplement increased the liver Zn concentration (58.97 vs. 46.59 mg/g; P<0.05) compared with rabbits fed ZnSO<sub>4</sub>. Supplementing with ZnLA increased duodenum villi height (681.63 vs. 587.14 μm, P<0.05) and decreased duodenum crypt depth (141.69 vs. 168.91 μm; P<0.05) when compared to that of the control group. However, experimental results obtained ZnMet and ZnGly supplementation were no significantly different to ZnSO<sub>4</sub>, except that feeding ZnMet led to higher (P<0.05) Zn concentrations in serum and liver than rabbits fed ZnSO<sub>4</sub>. The results indicated that supplementation with 80 mg/kg Zn as ZnLA could improve growth performance, increase liver Zn concentration and enhance duodenum morphology, while reducing the incidence of diarrhoea in growing rabbits.http://polipapers.upv.es/index.php/wrs/article/view/5770zincgrowth performancehealthbody Zn concentrationintestinal morphologyrabbit
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author J.Y. Yan
G.W. Zhang
C. Zhang
L. Tang
S.Y. Kuang
spellingShingle J.Y. Yan
G.W. Zhang
C. Zhang
L. Tang
S.Y. Kuang
Effect of dietary organic zinc sources on growth performance, incidence of diarrhoea, serum and tissue zinc concentrations, and intestinal morphology in growing rabbits
World Rabbit Science
zinc
growth performance
health
body Zn concentration
intestinal morphology
rabbit
author_facet J.Y. Yan
G.W. Zhang
C. Zhang
L. Tang
S.Y. Kuang
author_sort J.Y. Yan
title Effect of dietary organic zinc sources on growth performance, incidence of diarrhoea, serum and tissue zinc concentrations, and intestinal morphology in growing rabbits
title_short Effect of dietary organic zinc sources on growth performance, incidence of diarrhoea, serum and tissue zinc concentrations, and intestinal morphology in growing rabbits
title_full Effect of dietary organic zinc sources on growth performance, incidence of diarrhoea, serum and tissue zinc concentrations, and intestinal morphology in growing rabbits
title_fullStr Effect of dietary organic zinc sources on growth performance, incidence of diarrhoea, serum and tissue zinc concentrations, and intestinal morphology in growing rabbits
title_full_unstemmed Effect of dietary organic zinc sources on growth performance, incidence of diarrhoea, serum and tissue zinc concentrations, and intestinal morphology in growing rabbits
title_sort effect of dietary organic zinc sources on growth performance, incidence of diarrhoea, serum and tissue zinc concentrations, and intestinal morphology in growing rabbits
publisher Universitat Politècnica de València
series World Rabbit Science
issn 1257-5011
1989-8886
publishDate 2017-03-01
description This study was conducted to evaluate the effect of dietary organic zinc (Zn) sources on growth performance, the incidence of diarrhoea, serum and tissue Zn concentration, and intestinal morphology in growing rabbits. A total of 120 New Zealand White rabbits aged 35 d and with an initial body weight of 755±15 g, were randomly divided into 4 treatment groups for a 49 d feeding trial. Dietary treatments were designed with different Zn supplements as follows: (1) Control group: 80 mg/kg Zn as ZnSO<sub>4</sub>; (2) ZnLA group: 80 mg/kg Zn as Zn lactate; (3) ZnMet group: 80 mg/kg Zn as Zn methionine; (4) ZnGly group: 80 mg/kg Zn as Zn glycine. The results showed that, when compared with rabbits fed ZnSO<sub>4</sub>, supplementation with ZnLA improved (P<0.05) growth performance and led to a lower (P<0.01) incidence of diarrhoea. ZnLA supplement increased the liver Zn concentration (58.97 vs. 46.59 mg/g; P<0.05) compared with rabbits fed ZnSO<sub>4</sub>. Supplementing with ZnLA increased duodenum villi height (681.63 vs. 587.14 μm, P<0.05) and decreased duodenum crypt depth (141.69 vs. 168.91 μm; P<0.05) when compared to that of the control group. However, experimental results obtained ZnMet and ZnGly supplementation were no significantly different to ZnSO<sub>4</sub>, except that feeding ZnMet led to higher (P<0.05) Zn concentrations in serum and liver than rabbits fed ZnSO<sub>4</sub>. The results indicated that supplementation with 80 mg/kg Zn as ZnLA could improve growth performance, increase liver Zn concentration and enhance duodenum morphology, while reducing the incidence of diarrhoea in growing rabbits.
topic zinc
growth performance
health
body Zn concentration
intestinal morphology
rabbit
url http://polipapers.upv.es/index.php/wrs/article/view/5770
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