Determination and Prediction of Digestible and Metabolizable Energy from the Chemical Composition of Chinese Corn Gluten Feed Fed to Finishing Pigs

Article information

Asian-Australas J Anim Sci. 2014;27(6):871-879
1State Key Laboratory of Animal Nutrition, Ministry of Agriculture Feed Industry Centre, China Agriculture University, Beijing 100193, China
2The College of Agriculture, Dezhou University, Dezhou, Shandong 253023, China.
*Corresponding Author: F. L. Wang. Tel: +86-010-62733586, Fax: +86-010-62733586, E-mail: wangfl@cau.edu.cn
Received 2013 October 24; Revised 2014 January 07; Accepted 2014 February 14.

Abstract

Two experiments were conducted to determine the digestible energy (DE) and metabolizable energy (ME) contents of corn gluten feed (CGF) for finishing pigs and to develop equations predicting the DE and ME content from the chemical composition of the CGF samples, as well as validate the accuracy of the prediction equations. In Exp. 1, ten CGF samples from seven provinces of China were collected and fed to 66 finishing barrows (Duroc×Landrace×Yorkshire) with an initial body weight (BW) of 51.9±5.5 kg. The pigs were assigned to 11 diets comprising one basal diet and 10 CGF test diets with six pigs fed each diet. The basal diet contained corn (76%), dehulled soybean meal (21%) and premix (3%). The ten test diets were formulated by substituting 25% of the corn and dehulled soybean meal with CGF and contained corn (57%), dehulled soybean meal (15.75%), CGF (24.25%) and premix (3%). In Exp. 2, two additional CGF sources were collected as validation samples to test the accuracy of the prediction equations. In this experiment, 18 barrows (Duroc×Landrace×Yorkshire) with an initial BW of 61.1±4.0 kg were randomly allotted to be fed either the basal diet or two CGF containing diets which had a similar composition as used in Exp. 1. The DE and ME of CGF ranged from 10.37 to 12.85 MJ/kg of dry matter (DM) and 9.53 to 12.49 MJ/kg of DM, respectively. Through stepwise regression analysis, several prediction equations of DE and ME were generated. The best fit equations were: DE, MJ/kg of DM = 18.30–0.13 neutral detergent fiber–0.22 ether extract, with R2 = 0.95, residual standard deviation (RSD) = 0.21 and p<0.01; and ME, MJ/kg of DM = 12.82+0.11 Starch–0.26 acid detergent fiber, with R2 = 0.94, RSD = 0.20 and p<0.01. These results indicate that the DE and ME content of CGF varied substantially but the DE and ME for finishing pigs can be accurately predicted from equations based on nutritional analysis.

INTRODUCTION

Corn gluten feed (CGF) is a by-product of the wet milling of corn for starch or the ethanol industry, and is composed primarily of corn bran and steep liquor (Scott et al., 1997). It is widely used as a livestock feed (Evvard, 1920; Stock et al., 1999). The inclusion of CGF has been recommended at levels up to 20% of the diet for growing pigs (Castaing et al., 1990) and 30% for finishing pigs without reducing performance (Yen et al., 1971).

However, the average nutritional values of CGF were misleading because they could probably be affected by the ratio of bran and steep liquor (Ham et al., 1995). Its highly variable content of protein, poor amino acid profile and high level of fiber limit its use in monogastric animals (De Godoy et al., 2009). The uncertain nutrient contents directly affect the consistency of digestible energy (DE) and metabolizable energy (ME) and either cannot meet the requirement of pigs or lead to the waste of feed.

Using regression equations for DE and ME to predict the available energy has been reported to solve this problem (Noblet et al., 1993; Le Goff and Noblet, 2001; Anderson et al., 2012). The regression equations for growing-finishing pigs either could only predict the DE and ME of the diets containing CGF (Noblet and Perez, 1993; Le Goff and Noblet, 2001) or were established on the corn by-products with only one CGF sample (Young et al., 1977; Anderson et al., 2012). However, these two kinds of equations could not estimate accurately the energy values of feedstuffs, and specific equations should be established (Noblet et al., 1993). For these reasons, the objectives of this experiment were to determine the chemical composition, DE and ME of 10 CGF samples to finishing pigs and to develop prediction equations for energy content based on the chemical composition of individual CGF.

MATERIALS AND METHODS

General procedures

Two experiments were conducted in the Fengning Experimental Base (China Agricultural University, Beijing, China). Pigs were individually placed in stainless-steel metabolism crates (1.20×0.70×0.96 m) that allowed for the total, but separate, collection of feces and urine for an adjustment period of seven days followed by a 5-d collection period. The crates were installed with one drinking nipple and one feeding trough. In an environmentally controlled room, the temperature was maintained at 22±2°C.

In Exp. 1, ten CGF samples were obtained from 10 starch factories in the seven provinces of China where the primary starch industries are located in order to obtain as much variability as possible. The chemical composition of the different CGF sources are shown in Table 1 and 2. Sixty-six crossbred (Duroc×Landrace×Yorkshire) barrows weighing 51.9±5.5 kg were assigned to 11 diets comprising of one basal diet and 10 CGF test diets with six pigs fed each diet.

Analyzed composition of corn gluten feed in Exp. 1

Analyzed amino acid composition of corn gluten feeds in Exp. 1 (%, DM basis)

The basal diet was based on corn (76%), soybean meal (21%), and premix (3%). The ten test diets were formulated to contain 24.25% CGF, which replaced 25% of the energy supplied by corn and de-hulled soybean meal in the basal diet. The inclusion level of CGF was determined according to a preliminary experiment which found that 25% was the highest inclusion level considering the risk of feed refusals. The composition and nutrient levels of the experimental diets are shown in Table 3 and 4.

Composition of the experimental diets in Exp. 1 and 2 (%, as-fed)

Analyzed nutrient composition of the experimental diets for Exp. 1

For Exp. 2, another two CGF samples which were different from the previous ten samples were collected to validate the accuracy of the prediction equations in Exp. 1. Eighteen barrows (Duroc×Landrace×Yorkshire) were fed either the basal diet or one of the two test diets and the composition of the experimental diets were similar as that used in Exp. 1.

In the two studies, the daily feed allowance equaled 4% of body weight (Adeola, 2001). The amounts of feed, refusals and spillage for each pig were recorded. At 8:00 h and 17:00 h, equal meals were provided to the pigs, and the water was accessible freely throughout the trial. During the 5-d fecal and urine collection period, the feces were collected immediately upon appearance in the metabolism crates from 7:00 h to 21:00 h and were placed into the plastic bags. The urine was collected in buckets under the crates and contained 50 mL 6 N HCl all the day. The feces and 10% of the urine were stored at −20°C after the daily collection. At the end of the collection period, the feces of each pig over the 5-d period were thawed, mixed and weighed. Then, representative fecal sub-samples were weighed and dried in a 65°C forced-air oven and ground through a 1-mm screen. Likewise, 100 mL of urine samples were thawed and placed into the vessel for chemical analysis. The procedures for the collection and sample preparation of feces and urine were conducted according to the methods described by Ji et al. (2012) and Li et al. (2012).

Chemical analysis

The methods for analyzing the nutritional levels of samples were similar to the methods described by Ji et al. (2012) and Li et al. (2012). All samples were analyzed in duplicate. All CGF used in this experiment and the experimental diets were analyzed for dry matter (DM) (AOAC method 930.15, 2000), crude protein (CP) (AOAC method 990.03, 2000), ether extract (EE) (Thiex et al., 2003), crude fiber (CF) (AOAC method 978.10, 2000), ash (AOAC method 942.05, 2000), calcium (Ca) (AOAC method 927.02, 2000) and total phosphorous (TP) (AOAC method 965.17, 2000). The concentration of neutral detergent fiber (NDF) and acid detergent fiber (ADF) were determined by using the method described by Van Soest et al. (1991). The samples of CGF, diets, feces and urine were analyzed for gross energy (GE) via an adiabatic oxygen bomb calorimeter (Parr Instruments, Moline, IL, USA).

The CGF were analyzed for 15 amino acids (AOAC, method 999.13, 2000) using an Amino Acid Analyzer (Hitachi L-8900, Tokyo, Japan). Methionine and cysteine (AOAC, method 994.12, 2000) were analyzed using an Amino Acid Analyzer (Hitachi L-8800, Tokyo, Japan). Tryptophan (AOAC, method 998.15, 2000) was analyzed using High Performance Liquid Chromatography (Agilent 1200 Series, Santa Clara, CA). The starch concentration of CGF was analyzed according to the enzymatic method described by Xiong et al. (1990). The concentrations of sodium and sulfur in CGF were determined using a Polarized Zeeman Atomic Absorption Spectrometer (Hitachi Z2000, Tokyo, Japan).

Calculations

In the two experiments, the energy-contributing ingredients in the basal diet were corn and soybean meal, which made up 97% of the basal diet. Therefore, the energy concentration was calculated by dividing the DE and ME of the basal diet by 0.97. The DE and ME values for each source of CGF were calculated by subtracting the contribution from the control diet in the CGF-containing diets using the difference procedure (Adeola, 2001).

Statistical analysis

Data were analyzed statistically using the Proc GLM Procedure of SAS (SAS Inst. Inc., NC, USA). Individual pig was as the experimental unit and the nutritional values of the 10 CGF were compared by ANOVA. Stepwise regression procedures of SAS were used to determine the relationship between the chemical composition and DE and ME. The correlation coefficients between chemical composition and DE and ME of corn gluten feed sources was conducted by the Proc CORR procedure. The R2, residual standard deviation (RSD) and p value were used to define the best equation. In all analysis, a probability of p<0.05 was accepted as statistically significant. The level of significance adopted was 1% (p<0.01).

RESULTS

Nutrient composition of corn gluten feed sources in Exp. 1

The nutrient composition of the CGF varied substantially (Tables 1 and 2). Except DM and GE, the coefficient of variation (CV) of other criteria for the 10 CGF samples were higher than 10%, and the CV of EE, calcium, starch and sodium were greater than 40% which indicated that the quality of CGF from different provinces and industries had a large variability.

The average content of DM of the 10 CGF samples was 91.94%. On a DM basis, the content of CP, EE, starch and GE of the 10 samples ranged from 17.21 to 27.18%, 2.21 to 8.08%, 4.19 to 19.64%, and 18.24 to 19.40 MJ/kg, respectively. The mean fiber content including CF, NDF and ADF ranged from 7.44 to 16.47%, 37.15 to 52.91% and 10.60 to 15.25%, respectively. The concentration of ash, calcium, total phosphorous, sodium and sulfur ranged from 4.13 to 10.04%, 0.06 to 0.21%, 0.48 to 1.13%, 18 to 710 mg/kg and 654 to 1037 mg/kg. The CV of both the indispensable and dispensable amino acids were over 10%, but as for the quality of the indispensable amino acids, except arginine, histidine, lysine and tryptophan, the CV of other amino acids were less than 15%.

The DE, ME, apparent total tract digestibility (ATTD) of energy and ME/DE differed among the 10 sources of CGF from 10.37 to 12.85 MJ of DE/kg of DM, 9.53 to 12.49 MJ of ME/kg of DM, 53.85 to 69.22% and 85.61 to 97.16%, respectively, which is shown in Table 5.

Energy content and apparent total tract digestibility of GE of corn gluten feeds in Exp. 1

Correlations and prediction equations in Exp. 1

The fiber indicators, including NDF, ADF and CF, had a negative correlation with DE and ME but the content of starch had a positive correlation with DE and ME (Table 6). DE had a highly positive correlation with ME with a correlation coefficient of 0.89 (p<0.05). But GE had a negative correlation with DE and ME.

Correlation coefficients between chemical composition and DE and ME of corn gluten feeds1 (n = 6)

Based on the analyzed GE and nutrient composition of CGF and the calculated values for DE and ME, prediction equations for DE and ME were developed (Table 7). These equations showed that DE in CGF may be predicted from the concentration of fiber or a combination of fiber and some other indicators while the ME may be predicted from the starch content. The single predictor with the highest correlation coefficient for DE was ADF. While for ME, it was starch (0.74 for DE, p<0.05; 0.76 for ME, p<0.05, respectively). Adding more indicators to predict the DE and ME increased the R2 of the equations. For equations 2, 3 and 7 of DE, the R2 increased from 0.74 to 0.85 to 0.95, and from equations 9, 11 and 12 of ME, the R2 increased from 0.76 to 0.94 to 0.96. The content of CF or NDF also can be used to predict the DE equations. Furthermore, using the DE value to predict the content of ME obtained a prediction equation with a R2 value of 0.80 and RSD of 0.35.

Stepwise regression equations for DE and ME (kcal/kg DM) from chemical composition of corn gluten feeds in Exp. 1 (%, DM)

The accuracy of the prediction equations in Exp. 2

The nutrient composition and the determined and predicted DE and ME values of the two CGF sources are listed in Table 8. The determined DE and ME of the two CGF sources were within the ranges of DE and ME values determined in Exp. 1.

Analyzed chemical composition and energy content of corn gluten feeds in Exp. 2 (%, DM)

Equations 6 and 11 from Exp. 1 were selected to predict the DE and ME, respectively. The comparison of the determined available energy values and the predicted values are shown in Table 8 and the relative deviations were less than 5%.

DISCUSSION

Nutrient composition of corn gluten feed sources in Exp. 1

There was a large amount of variation among the chemical composition of the 10 CGF sources, which were also different from the values in NRC (2012). One possible reason was the different quality of corn which was used to produce the starch. Corn gluten feed is the by-product of the starch industry and is mainly composed of corn bran and steep liquor (Evvard, 1920; Stock et al., 1999). The corn from different provinces with the different conditions of soil and environment or the various cultivations might result in the different corn bran and steep liquor which directly led to the different chemical composition of CGF (Hull et al., 1996; Pedersen et al., 2007).

Another reason might be the different processing methods used for CGF. In terms of process, the steep liquor was the condensate of dilute sulfite liquor, which was used to steep the corn. Therefore, the temperature, the concentration of dilute sulfite liquor, the time of steeping and the kind of acidity regulator determined the quality of the corn steep liquor (Radley, 1976). High concentration of dilute sulfite liquor and long time of steeping would increase the sulfur content of CGF which negatively influenced the appetite of CGF and the digestibility of CGF. CGF was mixed in different ratios of corn bran and steep liquor. Then, the mixture was dried at a constant temperature. A higher proportion of corn bran which was mainly made of fiber would increase the fiber content of CGF. At the same time, higher proportion of steep liquor which contained many amino acids would increase the CP and amino acids content of CGF. All these factors may influence the chemical composition and available energy of CGF (Cozannet et al., 2010), as well as the color variation from yellow-light brown to dark brown (Hoffman, 1991).

The variability of CP and fiber fraction among the 10 CGF sources was large and can be partly explained by the ratios of corn bran and steep liquor, which is in accordance with the previous report (Evvard, 1920). With the content of CP and CF, CGF has traditionally been classified as a protein supplement feed for growing pigs with the substitution of corn up to 30% (Yen et al., 1971; Yen et al., 1974). Corn gluten feed can also be used as the primary protein and energy source for gestating sows (Honeyman and Zimmerman, 1990). The data of this research showed that more fiber means less crude protein. The content of NDF and ADF of sources 8 and 9 were 52.91 and 15.25% vs 41.74 and 11.90%, but the content of CP was 17.21 vs 27.18%, respectively. The data determined by Anderson et al. (2012) was also in accordance with this conclusion. At the same time, the large difference between ADF and NDF indicated that the fiber was largely hemicellulose (Hoffman, 1991). The EE of source 1 was higher than the others. This may be explained by the inclusion of corn germ, which is the rich-oil by-product of the corn-starch industry, in the CGF. The difference between the contents of calcium and sodium may be caused by the acidity regulator, including the most commonly used sodium hydroxide and calcium oxide (Radley, 1976). The calcium and sodium contents of source 5 were 0.15% and 710 mg/kg. The calcium and sodium contents of source 7 were 0.21% and 285 mg/kg. According to this we can conclude that the acidity regulators of sources 5 and 7 were sodium hydroxide and calcium oxide, respectively. The starch content of samples varied from 4.19 to 19.64%, and the mean value of starch in the current study was slightly less than other literature data (Hoffman, 1991; Knudsen, 1997; Anderson et al., 2012). Corn bran was obtained after the starch was removed from the corn; the separation procedure or corn varieties could explain this difference. The different sulfur content of the 10 samples can be explained by the quality and quantity of corn steep liquor, which contains sulfur dioxide. The palatability of CGF can be negatively affected by the concentration of sulfur, as reported by Morrow et al. (2013). The mean value of GE was 18.81 MJ/kg of DM, which is in accordance with Anderson et al. (2012) (18.98 MJ/kg of DM) but was slightly less than that of NRC (2012) (19.15 MJ/kg of DM). The concentration of amino acids in the 10 samples of CGF differed but generally agreed with recently published values (Anderson et al., 2012).

Digestible energy and metabolizable energy estimates for corn gluten feed in Exp.1

With the wide range in CGF composition, DE and ME varied with differences of 2.48 and 2.96 MJ/kg of DM among CGF. However, the differences were insignificant (p>0.05) with an average of 11.64 and 10.72 MJ/kg of DM, respectively. Sources 4 and 8 had the maximal and minimal DE (12.85 vs 10.37 MJ/kg of DM) and ME (12.49 vs 9.53 MJ/kg of DM). Digestible energy and ME of the literature data are in accordance with this study (Yen et al., 1974; Anderson et al., 2012), but the DE and ME described by Noblet et al. (1993) were less than that obtained in the current study. For the better utilization of fiber in sows, the DE and ME of CGF were higher than the values for finishing pigs in this research (Honeyman and Zimmerman, 1991). The ATTD of energy was not significantly different among the 10 CGF sources (p>0.05). The ME to DE ratio varied from 85.61 to 97.16%, with an average of 92.09%, which was in accordance with the literature data of 92.73%, determined by Anderson et al. (2012). The ME to DE ratio of corn bran was nearly 98.44%, which was higher than the value of CGF. This could have been due to the high level of CP and the imbalance of the amino acid composition of CGF (Pedersen et al., 2007).

Correlation and prediction equation in Exp. 1

With a dynamic equation, CGF can be used more efficiently while reducing the time and high cost of animal experiments (Noblet and Perez, 1993). Digestible energy and ME prediction equations for diets containing CGF had been published previously (Noblet et al., 1993; Noblet and Perez, 1993; Noblet et al., 1994; Le Goff and Noblet, 2001). But the equations cannot be used to predict feedstuffs whose digestibility of cell wall and EE are significantly different from the mean values in that study (Noblet and Perez, 1993). Additionally, there was significant interaction between the dietary ingredients (Noblet et al., 1993; Le Goff and Noblet, 2001). The DE and ME of corn byproducts including CGF predicted from chemical analysis has been done by Anderson et al. (2012), but in this experiment there was only one CGF sample. Therefore, the prediction equation of available energy of CGF should be established from the CGF sources with representation and difference.

The CP and starch content had a positive effect on DE and ME, but the fiber content and GE were negatively correlated with them. Starch has a high DE and ME, which can reach 17.09 and 17.08 MJ/kg of DM, respectively, and provide higher efficiency for ME (Noblet, 2000). CGF is a coproduct of the starch industry. Therefore, the content of starch, which was determined by the level of processing, was extremely important to the DE and ME values. The fiber content, including CF, NDF and ADF, had negative effects on DE and ME (Noblet, 2000). Corn fiber was the major part of CGF, and it can not be fully digested by pigs. Le Goff and Noblet (2001) and Noblet (1993) reported that the ATTD of energy decreased linearly when the NDF content of the diet increased. The ADF fraction alone accounted for most of the variation of barley energy content (Fairbairn et al., 1999). For distillers dried grains with solubles, the lower concentrations of ADF and NDF might contribute to the greater DE and ME (Pedersen et al., 2007). In addition, Noblet and Perez (1993) indicated that the available energy coming from fiber digestion was negligible when compared with the loss of endogenous protein and fat. Therefore, the low degradation and negative effect on the digestibility of other chemical constituents led to the negative coefficient between fiber and available energy.

The GE content had a negative correlation on the EE, CP, DE, and ME values but a positive correlation on the fiber content, which conflicted with previously published data (Noblet and Perez, 1993; Pedersen et al., 2007; Anderson et al., 2012). A possible explanation for the negative coefficient of EE is that the lower crude fat had little contribution to the GE, and it had statistical meaning but no biological meaning. As for the positive coefficient of fiber content, it may be because the fiber of CGF contributed greatly to GE, although the DE and ME of fiber were low.

Considering the accuracy of prediction equations of DE and ME, the convenience and the expense of measuring indexes, equations 6 and 11 were selected to be the best two for DE and ME, respectively. However, if there is no ability to test the starch content, equation 13 is proper to predict the ME value.

The accuracy of the predicted equations in Exp. 2

The purpose of this experiment was to use another two CGF sources that were different from the 10 CGF samples in Exp. 1 and conducted in a different time with Exp. 1 in order to validate the accuracy of the prediction equations from Exp. 1. Only in this way, the equations can be used with different CGF sample and experimental time.

In Exp. 1, equations 6 (DE = 18.30–0.13 NDF–0.22 EE) and 11 (ME = 12.82+0.11 Starch–0.26 ADF) were selected to be the best for DE and ME, respectively. The relative deviations of the determined available energy and the predicted ones were less than 5% which indicated that the accuracy of the two predicted equations were in an acceptable range (Li et al., 2012).

In the future, more samples of CGF should be added to establish the prediction equations with higher accuracy and wider application. In addition, more research about NE prediction equations should also be conducted.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

This research was financially supported by the Special Public Sector Fund in Agriculture (200903006) and Research and Demonstration on Pig Health and Management (2012BAD39B00).

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Article information Continued

Table 1

Analyzed composition of corn gluten feed in Exp. 1

Items Corn gluten feed sources1 Mean CV

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
DM 92.33 90.72 89.74 92.27 90.55 92.56 94.70 92.94 92.20 91.36 91.94 1.54
Composition (% of DM)
 CP 22.20 21.69 21.16 21.04 24.75 20.89 20.85 17.21 27.18 21.29 21.83 12.02
 Ether extract 8.08 6.74 3.97 3.10 2.87 2.78 5.30 4.71 2.21 2.41 4.22 46.84
 Crude fiber 9.90 10.92 14.13 9.77 10.88 9.11 11.05 16.47 7.44 12.33 11.20 23.07
 NDF 37.15 42.24 49.28 38.34 38.79 41.96 40.15 52.91 41.74 47.97 43.05 12.18
 ADF 10.74 13.64 13.46 10.60 10.69 12.50 11.94 15.25 11.90 12.61 12.33 12.14
 Ash 9.07 10.04 4.30 5.84 6.98 6.24 7.97 4.13 7.77 6.96 6.93 27.42
 Calcium 0.08 0.06 0.06 0.10 0.15 0.15 0.21 0.16 0.13 0.07 0.12 43.59
 Total phosphorus 0.94 0.84 0.77 0.84 0.89 0.81 0.48 0.54 1.13 1.05 0.83 24.30
 Starch 10.31 8.01 8.75 19.64 13.15 16.67 9.95 7.75 4.19 6.32 10.47 45.36
 Sodium (mg/kg) 180 3012 19 224 710 123 285 572 413 311 458 45
 Sulfur (mg/kg) 666 654 684 657 842 692 1014 845 1037 661 921 16
 GE (MJ/kg) 19.40 18.94 19.31 18.57 18.55 18.42 19.04 19.26 18.37 18.24 18.81 2.29

CV, coefficient of variation; DM, dry matter; CP, crude protein; NDF, neutral detergent fiber; ADF, acid detergent fiber; GE, gross energy.

1

Sources 1 to 6 were collected from different starch industries located in Inner Mongolia, Jilin and Shandong Provinces of China, respectively. Sources 7 to 10 were collected from Shanxi, Hebei, Henan and Shaanxi Provinces of China, respectively.

Table 2

Analyzed amino acid composition of corn gluten feeds in Exp. 1 (%, DM basis)

Corn gluten feed sources1 Mean CV

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
CP 22.20 21.69 21.16 21.04 24.75 20.89 20.85 17.21 27.18 21.29 21.83 12.02
Indispensable amino acids
 Arginine 1.13 0.95 1.04 0.79 0.69 0.64 0.50 0.75 1.29 0.50 0.83 32.28
 Histidine 0.73 0.70 0.62 0.63 0.72 0.65 0.48 0.61 0.98 0.59 0.67 19.26
 Isoleucine 0.68 0.66 0.60 0.64 0.76 0.64 0.59 0.50 0.83 0.61 0.65 13.98
 Leucine 2.01 1.86 1.84 1.93 2.28 1.95 1.75 1.52 2.42 1.84 1.94 13.23
 Lysine 0.75 0.70 0.72 0.52 0.65 0.56 0.36 0.54 0.95 0.46 0.62 26.92
 Methionine 0.35 0.34 0.30 0.30 0.38 0.31 0.29 0.26 0.41 0.28 0.32 14.60
 Phenylalanine 0.72 0.72 0.68 0.70 0.83 0.67 0.63 0.57 0.90 0.62 0.70 13.81
 Threonine 0.82 0.80 0.75 0.78 0.91 0.80 0.69 0.67 1.06 0.84 0.81 13.86
 Tryptophan 0.10 0.11 0.11 0.11 0.10 0.07 0.08 0.07 0.08 0.08 0.09 18.00
 Valine 1.14 1.09 0.99 1.01 1.28 1.06 0.98 0.90 1.46 1.06 1.10 14.86
Dispensable amino acids
 Alanine 1.52 1.61 1.44 1.66 1.79 1.52 1.45 1.07 1.80 1.63 1.55 13.48
 Aspartate 1.45 1.25 1.07 1.14 1.35 1.00 0.92 0.96 1.71 0.98 1.18 21.69
 Cystine 0.46 0.44 0.43 0.39 0.51 0.44 0.41 0.43 0.60 0.46 0.46 12.89
 Glutamic acid 3.38 3.26 3.23 3.19 3.65 3.12 2.79 2.66 4.11 2.97 3.24 12.97
 Glycine 0.95 0.94 0.85 0.91 1.07 0.88 0.79 0.78 1.26 0.94 0.94 15.13
 Proline 1.93 1.80 1.85 1.81 2.23 2.01 1.61 1.66 2.59 2.06 1.96 14.80
 Serine 0.90 0.87 0.84 0.78 0.94 0.86 0.76 0.70 1.17 0.86 0.87 14.51
 Tyrosine 0.53 0.55 0.48 0.38 0.39 0.35 0.27 0.35 0.56 0.28 0.42 25.95

DM, dry matter; CV, coefficient of variation; CP, crude protein.

1

Sources 1 to 6 were collected from different starch industries located in Inner Mongolia, Jilin and Shandong Provinces of China, respectively. Sources 7 to 10 were collected from Shanxi, Hebei, Henan and Shaanxi Provinces of China, respectively.

Table 3

Composition of the experimental diets in Exp. 1 and 2 (%, as-fed)

Items Basal diet Experimental diets
Corn 76.00 57.00
Dehulled soybean meal 21.00 15.75
Corn gluten feed - 24.25
Dicalcium phosphate 1.10 1.10
Limestone 0.90 0.90
Sodium chloride 0.30 0.30
Choline chloride 0.20 0.20
Vitamin and micro mineral premix1 0.50 0.50
1

Premix provided the following per kg of complete diet: vitamin A, 5,512 IU; vitamin D3, 2,200 IU; vitamin E, 30 IU; vitamin K3, 2.2 mg; vitamin B12, 27.6 μg; riboflavin, 4 mg; pantothenic acid, 14 mg; niacin, 30 mg; choline chloride, 400 mg; folacin, 0.7 mg; thiamine 1.5 mg; pyridoxine 3 mg; biotin, 44 μg; Mn, 40 mg (MnO); Fe, 75 mg (FeSO4·H2O); Zn, 75 mg (ZnO); Cu, 100 mg (CuSO4·5H2O); I, 0.3 mg (KI); Se, 0.3 mg (Na2SeO3).

Table 4

Analyzed nutrient composition of the experimental diets for Exp. 1

Items Corn gluten feed sources1

Basal diet 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
DM 88.94 90.06 90.13 90.15 90.35 89.84 90.30 90.11 90.33 90.57 90.23
Composition (% of DM)
 CP 17.97 19.18 18.46 18.44 18.39 19.26 18.55 19.18 17.76 19.71 18.58
 Ether extract 2.28 3.67 4.17 3.46 3.09 3.20 3.12 3.76 3.69 3.09 2.93
 Crude fiber 2.59 4.21 4.49 4.63 3.92 4.13 4.30 4.24 5.65 4.30 4.81
 NDF 10.25 16.33 17.80 20.43 17.63 17.82 17.95 17.04 20.74 17.77 20.05
 ADF 2.90 4.41 5.00 5.49 4.98 4.95 5.39 4.73 5.70 4.93 5.54
 Ash 5.24 6.37 6.41 5.19 5.81 5.87 6.26 6.23 5.35 6.13 5.88
 Calcium 0.78 0.73 0.73 0.75 0.77 0.73 0.80 0.73 0.73 0.73 0.75
 Total Phosphorus 0.57 0.72 0.65 0.64 0.67 0.66 0.73 0.58 0.59 0.73 0.72
 GE (MJ/kg) 17.95 17.99 18.11 18.21 17.89 18.00 17.86 18.11 18.10 17.89 17.99

DM, dry matter; CP, crude protein; NDF, neutral detergent fiber; ADF, acid detergent fiber; GE, gross energy.

1

Sources 1 to 6 were collected from different starch industries located in Inner Mongolia, Jilin and Shandong Provinces of China, respectively. Sources 7 to 10 were collected from Shanxi, Hebei, Henan and Shaanxi Provinces of China, respectively.

Table 5

Energy content and apparent total tract digestibility of GE of corn gluten feeds in Exp. 1

Items Corn gluten feed sources1 (n = 6) SEM p-value

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
DE (MJ/kg as-fed) 10.80 10.04 9.70 11.86 11.15 11.28 10.98 9.64 11.25 10.33 0.65 0.25
DE (MJ/kg DM) 11.69 11.07 10.81 12.85 12.31 12.18 11.60 10.37 12.20 11.31 0.70 0.33
ME (MJ/kg as-fed) 10.01 9.17 9.21 11.52 10.16 10.52 10.03 8.86 9.63 9.45 0.68 0.26
ME (MJ/kg DM) 10.84 10.10 10.27 12.49 11.22 11.37 10.59 9.53 10.45 10.34 0.75 0.31
ATTD of GE (%) 60.27 58.44 55.98 69.22 66.35 66.12 60.89 53.85 66.44 62.01 0.04 0.09
ME/DE2 (%) 92.68 91.29 94.95 97.16 91.14 93.32 91.34 91.93 85.61 91.45 0.03 0.45

GE, gross energy; SEM, standard error of the mean; DE, digestible energy; DM, dry matter; ME, metabolizable energy; ATTD, apparent total tract digestibility.

1

Sources 1 to 6 were collected from different starch industries located in Inner Mongolia, Jilin and Shandong Provinces of China, respectively. Sources 7 to 10 were collected from Shanxi, Hebei, Henan and Shaanxi Provinces of China, respectively.

2

ME/DE = The ratio of ME to DE.

Table 6

Correlation coefficients between chemical composition and DE and ME of corn gluten feeds1 (n = 6)

Item CP EE NDF ADF CF Ash Starch GE DE
EE −0.29
NDF −0.54 −0.20
ADF −0.59 0.08 0.88
CF −0.74 0.14 0.82 0.72
Ash 0.45 0.50 −0.64 −0.37 −0.60
Starch −0.20 −0.13 −0.48 −0.47 −0.24 −0.20
GE −0.46 0.79 0.18 0.31 0.52 −0.07 −0.15
DE 0.57 −0.39 −0.80 −0.86 −0.82 0.22 0.62 −0.60
ME 0.22 −0.28 −0.70 −0.79 −0.58 0.01 0.87 −0.40 0.89

CP, crude protein; EE, ether extract; NDF, neutral detergent fiber; ADF, acid detergent fiber; CF, crude fiber; GE, gross energy; DE, digestible energy; ME, metabolizable energy.

1

A correlation whose absolute value is above 0.51 is different from 0 (p<0.05).

Table 7

Stepwise regression equations for DE and ME (kcal/kg DM) from chemical composition of corn gluten feeds in Exp. 1 (%, DM)

No. Predication equations R2 RSD p-value
1 DE = 14.36–0.24 CF 0.67 0.42 <0.01
2 DE = 17.08–0.44 ADF 0.74 0.37 <0.01
3 DE = 17.44–0.43 ADF–0.12 EE 0.85 0.28 <0.01
4 DE = 13.23–0.21 CF+0.07 Starch 0.87 0.27 <0.01
5 DE = 9.03–0.10 CF+0.12 CP+0.10 Starch 0.92 0.21 <0.01
6 DE = 18.30–0.13 NDF–0.22 EE 0.95 0.21 <0.01
7 DE = 18.30–0.05 ADF–0.21 EE–0.12 NDF 0.95 0.16 <0.01
8 DE = 17.44–0.20 EE–0.12 NDF+0. 03 Starch 0.97 0.16 <0.01
9 ME = 9.15+0.15 Starch 0.76 0.38 <0.01
10 ME = 6.24+0.16 Starch+0.13 CP 0.91 0.23 <0.01
11 ME = 12.82+0.11 Starch–0.26 ADF 0.94 0.20 <0.01
12 ME = 13.11+0.11 Starch–0.26 ADF–0.07 EE 0.96 0.16 <0.01
13 ME = 0.96 DE–0.43 0.80 0.35 <0.01

DE, digestible energy; ME, metabolizable energy; DM, dry matter; RSD, residual standard deviation; CF, crude fiber; ADF, acid detergent fiber; EE, ether extract; CP, crude protein; NDF, neutral detergent fiber.

Table 8

Analyzed chemical composition and energy content of corn gluten feeds in Exp. 2 (%, DM)

Items Corn gluten feed sources1

11 12
CP 22.19 19.17
EE 2.54 2.80
NDF 42.76 48.69
ADF 12.15 16.59
Ash 5.49 7.25
Calcium 0.04 0.06
Total phosphorus 0.85 1.09
Starch 13.47 8.34
DE (MJ/kg) DE = 18.30–0.13 NDF–0.22 EE
 Determined DE 12.41 10.52
 Predicted DE 12.18 11.35
 Difference 0.23 0.84
 Relative deviation (%) 0.93 3.84
ME (MJ/kg) ME = 12.82+0.11 Starch–0.26 ADF
 Determined ME 12.12 10.27
 Predicted ME 11.14 9.42
 Difference 0.98 0.84
 Relative deviation (%) 4.20 4.28

DM, dry matter; CP, crude protein; EE, ether extract; NDF, neutral detergent fiber; ADF, acid detergent fiber; DE, digestible energy; ME, metabolizable energy.

1

Sources 11 and 12 were collected from Jilin and Hebei Provinces of China, respectively.