Effect of Feeding Benzoic acid on Performance of Broiler Chickens

The research was conducted to determine the influence of benzoic acid on growth performance, carcass traits, blood parameters and meat chemical composition of broiler birds. The research was carried out using 90 three weeks old broilers (Ross 308) divided into three groups, 30 per each. The levels o...

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Main Authors: Rasha I.M. Hassan, Ghada S.E. Abdel Raheem
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Assiut University 2016-10-01
Series:Journal of Advanced Veterinary Research
Online Access:http://advetresearch.com/index.php/AVR/article/view/17
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spelling doaj-454f83c315c842e1935275d809ebc4bc2020-11-24T23:41:10ZengAssiut UniversityJournal of Advanced Veterinary Research2090-62692090-62772016-10-016411812217Effect of Feeding Benzoic acid on Performance of Broiler ChickensRasha I.M. HassanGhada S.E. Abdel RaheemThe research was conducted to determine the influence of benzoic acid on growth performance, carcass traits, blood parameters and meat chemical composition of broiler birds. The research was carried out using 90 three weeks old broilers (Ross 308) divided into three groups, 30 per each. The levels of inclusion of the benzoic acid was based on treatment 1 (control) 0%, treatment 2 = 0.4% and treatment 3 = 0.8%. Results showed that, feeding benzoic acid to broilers had no significant on body weight, weight gain, feed intake and feed conversion at the two tested levels. Carcass traits did not show significant differences for the treatments, with the exception of bursa weight significantly increased. The serum total protein and globulin were significantly (P<0.05) increased in benzoic acid supplemented broilers. However, no significant differences were observed in serum albumin, triglyceride, cholesterol and uric acid between different experimental groups. No significant differences were observed for hematological parameters among all treated groups. There were no significant differences in chemical composition of broilers meat, including dry matter, protein and ash content. It could be concluded that, dietary inclusion of benzoic acid at both levels improved the immune response by increasing the weight of bursa of Fabricius and elevating blood globulin level but did not affect broiler chickens growth performance.http://advetresearch.com/index.php/AVR/article/view/17
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rasha I.M. Hassan
Ghada S.E. Abdel Raheem
spellingShingle Rasha I.M. Hassan
Ghada S.E. Abdel Raheem
Effect of Feeding Benzoic acid on Performance of Broiler Chickens
Journal of Advanced Veterinary Research
author_facet Rasha I.M. Hassan
Ghada S.E. Abdel Raheem
author_sort Rasha I.M. Hassan
title Effect of Feeding Benzoic acid on Performance of Broiler Chickens
title_short Effect of Feeding Benzoic acid on Performance of Broiler Chickens
title_full Effect of Feeding Benzoic acid on Performance of Broiler Chickens
title_fullStr Effect of Feeding Benzoic acid on Performance of Broiler Chickens
title_full_unstemmed Effect of Feeding Benzoic acid on Performance of Broiler Chickens
title_sort effect of feeding benzoic acid on performance of broiler chickens
publisher Assiut University
series Journal of Advanced Veterinary Research
issn 2090-6269
2090-6277
publishDate 2016-10-01
description The research was conducted to determine the influence of benzoic acid on growth performance, carcass traits, blood parameters and meat chemical composition of broiler birds. The research was carried out using 90 three weeks old broilers (Ross 308) divided into three groups, 30 per each. The levels of inclusion of the benzoic acid was based on treatment 1 (control) 0%, treatment 2 = 0.4% and treatment 3 = 0.8%. Results showed that, feeding benzoic acid to broilers had no significant on body weight, weight gain, feed intake and feed conversion at the two tested levels. Carcass traits did not show significant differences for the treatments, with the exception of bursa weight significantly increased. The serum total protein and globulin were significantly (P<0.05) increased in benzoic acid supplemented broilers. However, no significant differences were observed in serum albumin, triglyceride, cholesterol and uric acid between different experimental groups. No significant differences were observed for hematological parameters among all treated groups. There were no significant differences in chemical composition of broilers meat, including dry matter, protein and ash content. It could be concluded that, dietary inclusion of benzoic acid at both levels improved the immune response by increasing the weight of bursa of Fabricius and elevating blood globulin level but did not affect broiler chickens growth performance.
url http://advetresearch.com/index.php/AVR/article/view/17
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