Outlook: Sorghum as a feed grain for Australian chicken-meat production

Animal Nutrition
Peter H SelleSonia Y Liu

Abstract

This review is an outlook for sorghum as a feed grain for broiler chickens based on a survey of relevant stake-holders and recent research outcomes. Australian grain sorghum production will probably continue to generate a harvest in the order of 2.5 × 106 t of which some 7.9 × 105 t will be used as a feed grain for poultry and pigs. Feed grains are included primarily to provide energy from starch, but energy utilisation by broiler chickens offered sorghum-based diets is relatively inferior, because of incomplete starch digestion. Kafirin, the dominant protein fraction, 'non-tannin' phenolic compounds and phytate are 3 'starch extrinsic' factors in sorghum that compromise starch digestibility and energy utilisation in broiler chickens offered sorghum-based diets. Kafirin concentrations in 6 sorghum varieties were negatively correlated with metabolizable energy to gross energy (ME:GE) ratios (r = -0.891; P < 0.02) or the efficiency of energy utilisation in broiler chickens. Importantly, kafirin proportions of sorghum protein may be increasing with time in Australia. If so, this represents a fundamental challenge to sorghum breeders which presumably could be met by the development of sorghum varieties with different characteristic...Continue Reading

Citations

Mar 19, 2021·Journal of Animal Physiology and Animal Nutrition·Long PanWeiyun Zhu
Mar 19, 2021·Frontiers in Plant Science·Hayden E HodgesDuncan D Cameron

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