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Exploring prebiotics to revolutionise gut health in layers

14-04-2021 | |
Dr Natalie Morgan, poultry nutritionist at Australia’s University of New England. Photo: Natalie Morgan
Dr Natalie Morgan, poultry nutritionist at Australia’s University of New England. Photo: Natalie Morgan

Can improvements be made in chicken production, and antibiotic use significantly lowered, with the use of prebiotics in the diets of egg-laying hens? A University of New England 2021 Science and Innovation Award winner is investigating.

Poultry nutritionist, Dr Natalie Morgan, is investigating this concept after winning the Australian Eggs Award in the 2021 Science and Innovation Awards for Young People in Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry. She is using her AUS$22,000 (US$16,800) award to fund an 8-week project to examine the effects of adding prebiotics called xylo-oligosaccharides (XOS for short) to the diets of egg-laying hens.

Effects of XOS in layers could be amplified

XOS have been studied in meat chickens, where they significantly improved gut health and production, but have yet to be investigated in egg-laying chickens, she says, noting that egg-laying hens live longer than broilers and so establish more mature gut microbiomes, suggesting the positive effects of XOS might be amplified.

Long-chain sugars reduce nutrient absorption

Grains fed to commercial poultry contain long-chain sugars that reduce nutrient absorption in the bird’s gut. This means important nutrients are wasted, or act as a food source for pathogenic gut bacteria. To deal with the problem, all commercial chicken feeds contain an enzyme that breaks up the long-chain sugars into more desirable forms – including XOS.

We are hoping that feeding XOS will cause the hens to have better gut health (identified by measuring short chain fatty acid production, microbiota composition, nutrient digestibility and intestinal enzyme activity), and ultimately better performance (egg quality and bird weights).

XOS fuel beneficial gut bacteria

As a prebiotic, XOS fuel beneficial gut bacteria, so Dr Morgan asks what would happen if prebiotic XOS were added directly into the feed, as opposed to relying on the chickens to make them themselves in their gut.

The study: 8 weeks with 96 layers

The 8-week project is expected to begin at the end of April. “A total of 96 birds in individual cages will be used in the study that will be conducted here on the campus. The birds will be fed 12 different dietary treatments with 2 differing xylan levels, 3 different levels of XOS and with or without xylanase,” Dr Morgan told All About Feed.

Lessen dependence on antibiotics

Dr Morgan hopes that her pilot project will show the potential for supplementing feeds with XOS to boost hen feed conversion and productivity, and lower faeces contamination of eggs – and possibly even improve gut health to the point where it affects the chickens’ immunity to disease, lessening dependence on antibiotics.

Better performance

“We are hoping that feeding XOS will cause the hens to have better gut health (identified by measuring short chain fatty acid production, microbiota composition, nutrient digestibility and intestinal enzyme activity), and ultimately better performance (egg quality and bird weights),” she said, adding that if XOS is shown to be an efficacious prebiotic for laying hens it can potentially be used as alternative to antibiotics through its ability to promote gut health.

These prebiotics are a potentially cheap way to achieve gains

Because XOS can also be extracted from waste products derived when grains are milled for starch, it is a potentially cheap way to obtain gains in poultry production – an industry where most other avenues for production gains are pushed to their limits.

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Kinsley
Natalie Kinsley Freelance journalist