dc.description.abstract | The study was conducted to determine the effect of medium chain fatty acids and
Saccharomyces cerevisiae on performance in broiler chicks. A field trial was carried out
with 200 broiler chicks ((Lohman) in four groups, treatment group one (T1); treatment
group two (T2); treatment group three (T3) and another was control group (C). The
treatment group (T1) received a standard feed with commercially available medium chain
fatty acids (MCFA) and Saccharomyces cerevisiae (S. cerevisiae type boulardii 2.0x1010
CFU/gm), treatment group (T2) received a standard feed with medium chain fatty acids
(MCFA), treatment group (T3) received a standard feed with Saccharomyces cerevisiae
(S. cerevisiae type boulardii 2.0x1010 CFU/gm) and control group (C) received standard
feed without MCFA and S. cerevisiae. Experimental treatment was fed with MCFA (2
gm/ kg feed for 10 days, 1.5 gm/kg feed for next 10 days, 1gm/ kg feed for 8 days) and
Saccharomyces cerevisiae (0.2gm/ kg feed for 10 days, 0.15 gm/ kg feed for 10 days,
0.1 gm/ kg feed for 8 days) during the experiment. The birds were reared for 4 weeks.
At the end of the study, body weight, weekly weight gain, feed consumption, FCR and
mortality rate were recorded. Data analyses had shown that the final average body
weight and average weight gain of the birds belonging to the groups T1, T2 and T3 were
higher (p< 0.01) than the control group. FCR was lowered (p<0.05) 1.36, 1.37, 1.38 for
the birds group T1, T3 and T2 respectively as compared to control group. There was no
significance difference between the treatment group T2 and T3 but there was significance
difference between the treatment group and control group (p<0.10) in terms of feed
consumption. In case of livability, there was significant difference among birds group T1,
T2, T3 and control group (p<0.01). Data analyses of organ weight showed that the
addition of MCFA and SC birds group (T1) in diets of broiler chickens significantly
increased (p<0.01) the weight of intestine with chymus by 41%, intestine without
chymus 17%, gizzard 5%, head 8% and neck 11% compared with control group. No
significant differences were observed among the experimental groups for liver, spleen
and pancreas weight. | en_US |