July 30, 2010


Australia advances in pig feed research

 


Dr Peter Sopade of the University of Queensland, as supported by Australia's Pork Cooperative Research Centre (CRC), has developed a diabetic test to help pork producers feed pigs efficiently.


They have developed a simple glucose meter, or glucometer, commonly used by diabetics to measure blood glucose levels, is set to help Australian pork producers more efficiently feed their pigs. It was one of the key outcomes of the CRC project, "Processing Methods for Improving the Utilisation of Cereal Grains by Pigs."
 

Professor Mike Gidley, Principal Investigator, said developing a rapid in-vitro starch digestion technique for animal feed involved examining pig digestion of cereal grains based on the need to maximise available energy for pig growth from grain-based feeds.
 

Dr Sopade said that with cereals in pig diets potentially containing 17MJ/kg energy from starch, it was important to quantify how easily that starch would be digested. The new method, based on glucometry, could speed up analysis of starch digestion and help processors, nutritionists, pork producers and ingredient suppliers maximise energy delivery and therefore feed conversion ratios.
 

"To investigate the suitability of the glucometer, we looked at changes in processing, raw material, formulation, grain particle size and digestion time. We assessed the variability of detection speed, accuracy, sensitivity, and analyte volume, as well as developing an equation to calculate digested starch. Existing techniques for in-vitro starch digestion, particularly in measuring glucose released, are expensive, cumbersome and slow. Our team at the University of Queensland, along with the Pork CRC, identified a need for a simpler, more robust, faster method and what we developed is ten times faster," said Dr Sopade.
 

Dr Sopade said the new technique could be established as part of quality control in feed processing and was exciting for anyone considering assessing digestion and choosing ingredients and additives to maximise energy delivery to pigs from cereal feed grains.

Video >

Follow Us

FacebookTwitterLinkedIn