Title: PP32 Nutrient Partitioning for Growth
1PP32Nutrient Partitioning for Growth
- ANS 3043
- University of Florida
- Dr. Michael J. Fields
2Nutrient Requirements
3Nutrient Requirements
- Maintenance Requirements
- Maintain bodily functions with little or no
physical activity - Growth Requirements
- Body tissues muscle, bone, fat
- Depends on location of animal on its growth curve
- Fetal growth if needed
4Nutrient Requirements
- Production Requirements
- Work, lactation, wool, eggs
- Reproduction primarily mating behaviors in
males - Effects of environmental stressors
- Modify maintenance and growth requirements
- Climatic conditions, altitude, social behaviors,
nutrient availability
5Nutrient Partitioning
- Utilization of nutrients is partitioned among
various tissues and organs according to their
metabolic rate and physiological importance - Order of Priority (highest to lowest)
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8Nutrient Partitioning
- Altering of Order of Priority
- Pregnancy fetus holds priority similar to vital
organs of dam - Species differences, some wild animals will abort
fetus in order to survive - Transition from non-lactating to lactating
- Change in priority of nutrients from tissue gain
to supporting lactating
9Energy Balance
- Positive nutrients are plentiful for body
maintenance, growth and fattening - Negative nutrient intake is not sufficient to
meet these needs - Lactating dairy cow
- Cant eat enough to meet nutrient demands
- Mobilizes body energy reserves (fat as an energy
source)
10Growth Rate Efficiency of Growth
- Species differe in their ability to convert feed
to gain - Simple stomach animals (grain base diet) have
greater capacity to ingest metabolizable energy
per unit of metabolic weight than ruminants
(forage diet) - Estimated feed conversions feed/gain
- Chickens 1.0-1.5 / 1
- Pigs 2.0-3.0 /1
- Cattle 5.0-7.0 / 1
11Nutrient Intake
- Prenatal
- Important role of placental in distribution of
nutrients to fetus - Fetus has equal priority to maternal organ system
- Under-nutrition results in decreased birth
weights - Common in litter bearing animals
- Decreases size of fetus and its organs (less DNA
content in tissues) - Decreased skeletal muscle is a result of fewer
muscle fibers (less potential for postnatal
muscle hypertrophy)
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14Nutrient Intake
- Postnatal
- Requirements for lean growth are met sooner than
for normal animals - Grow slower and deposit fat earlier in growth
curve - Inferior feed to gain ratios
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16Nutrient Intake
- Perinatal Period (during and after birth)
- Metabolic rates increase significantly
- Maintains body temperature of newborn
- Energy initially derived from muscle and liver
glycogen - Can also be derived from colostrum
- Some energy derived from brown adipose tissue
- Greater effect in wild species than livestock
species - Energy can also be derived from white adipose
tissue in some species
17Nutrient Intake
- Weaning
- Dramatic changes in quantity and quality of diet
consumed by animals - Accompanied by transient decrease in growth
- Some mobilization of fat and possibly muscle
- Diets are balanced to meet protein and energy
requirements for growing animals - Easy to overfeed animals resulting in excess fat
deposition - Can have a negative effect on future
productivity, particularly milk production
because of excess fat in mammary gland - More effective to limit nutrient intake or slow
steady gain, - does not influence muscle growth as long as
energy and protein requirements are met
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19Nutrient Requirements Postnatal Period
- Dietary Protein
- Quantity and quality must be considered together
- More important in monogastric than ruminant
- Ruminants utilize rumen microbial protein for
some amino acids - Diets with sufficient energy but insufficient
protein for tissue deposition result in increased
fat deposition (primarily monogastric) - Complicated because animals cannot synthesize
tissue proteins beyond their genetic potential - Consumption of excess protein results in surplus
protein being metabolized for energy or excreted
20Daily nutrient intake recommendations for horses
21Daily nutrient intake recommendations for horses
22Metabolizable protein and energy requirements of
dogs of different physiological sates
aMetabolizable protein, g per W0.75 per day bKcal
per W0.75 kg per day
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26Nutrient Requirements Muscle Accretion
- Animals with increased muscle protein accretion
rates require more protein - Genetically selected animals
- Administered metabolism modifiers
- Example GH
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28Nutrient Requirements Dietary Energy
- Energy required for maintenance increases with
size - Energy needed for growth varies with rate and
composition of body weight gain - Once energy intake is increased beyond point of
maximum lean gain, fat gain will start to
increase significantly because of excess energy - Since fat contains more energy than protein, the
energy requirement per unit of body gain
increases with increased fat - Composition of gain has a significant impact on
total energy requirement - Protein turnover also cost energy and results in
an increase in energy wasting
29Maintenance requirements of pigs at different
weights
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31Growth Rates
- High Growth Rates are a Function of
- Genetics increased genetic potential for
increased lean growth and ability to convert feed
to gain - Sex class of animal (male, female, castrate)
- Location on growth curve self accelerating
versus self inhibiting - Need to monitor body weight gain based on body
composition (lean vs. fat deposition)
32Growth Rates
- Example
- Boar vs. Gilt
- Boars have greater capacity for depositing
protein, therefore boars have a higher dietary
energy requirement - Example Growth Stimulants
- Increased dietary protein deposition increases
dietary energy requirements
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34Compensatory Growth
- Growth exhibited by an animal after a period of
nutritional stress - Rate of growth is often greater than that
exhibited by a genetically identical animal
during normal growth (catch-up growth) - Result of several homeostatic and homeorhetic
effects - Low basal metabolism during nutrient restriction
due to decreased visceral weight - Maintained for a time during realimentation and
allows more dietary protein and energy for growth
of major tissues rather than basal metabolism - Increase in feed intake during realimentation
contributes to increased growth
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36Compensatory Growth
- Severity of nutrient restriction and stage of
growth curve at which restriction takes place can
influence how much compensatory growth occurs - Nutrient restriction severe enough to delay
catch-up period - Nutrient restriction early in growth can result
in long-lasting effects, which are greatest on
early maturing tissues (bone) and less on later
maturing tissues (fat) - Can result in permanent stunting of animal with
smaller mature body sizes - Enhances onset of fattening
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39Nutrient Partitioning of Energy
Prioritization of nutrients at different planes
of nutrition and weight loss levels.