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It can also cause visceral gout from the load on the liver. I think as many people over feed protein as there are those that feed insufficient amounts.Feeding to much protein can cause over weight too right?
Feeding to much protein can cause over weight too right?
I have read (in a real book--not a blogger) and I can't find it for the life of me...but I read that feeding a feed that is too high in protein to a bird that does not need it is bad = over weight bird.It can also cause visceral gout from the load on the liver. I think as many people over feed protein as there are those that feed insufficient amounts.
Mature roosters do just fine on 13% protein. Laying hens do best on 17% protein. 22% protein should be reserved for the first few weeks of a meat bird's life.
18-20% protein is about right for chickens from 0-12 weeks. They can be slowed down from there depending on their ultimate purpose.
YES!Weight is primarily dictated by total calories regardless of whether those calories come from fat, protein or carbohydrates.
If chickens only ate the to fulfill the number of calories to keep them at proper weight they would never be fat (lots of other problems would still be on the table). So it seems that total calories + nutrient needs play into what dictates chickens will eat. If they are eating an imbalanced diet they continue to eat so that they exceed their caloric needs but meet nutritional requirements for fat/protein/carbohydrates/vitamins/minerals to some extent.
I've gleaned that from scientific studies and text books. If I get the time I'll try to cite some for you.I have read (in a real book--not a blogger) and I can't find it for the life of me...but I read that feeding a feed that is too high in protein to a bird that does not need it is bad = over weight bird.
Do you know where I read that?
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Yes this is what I like to read too and I know I have seen it but can't for the life of me find it again.I've gleaned that from scientific studies and text books. If I get the time I'll try to cite some for you.
Primarily what happens with excessive amino acids is that they are processed by the liver and are excreted as nitrogenous waste which becomes ammonia in the bedding.
A feed can be high in crude protein and still deficient is some essential amino acids. The excess of non-essential or unneeded essential amino acids ends up in the bedding. A vegetable based diet can be a problem unless non-essentials are kept as low as possible while providing more of the limiting amino acids in synthetic form.
Not at all.Weight is primarily dictated by total calories regardless of whether those calories come from fat, protein or carbohydrates.
If chickens only ate the to fulfill the number of calories to keep them at proper weight they would never be fat (lots of other problems would still be on the table). So it seems that total calories + nutrient needs play into what dictates chickens will eat. If they are eating an imbalanced diet they continue to eat so that they exceed their caloric needs but meet nutritional requirements for fat/protein/carbohydrates/vitamins/minerals to some extent.