Dietary sodium sulfate supplementation improves eggshell quality, uterine ion transportation and glycosaminoglycan synthesis in laying hens
Kai-bo Fu, Dong Dai, Jian-min Zhou, Jing Wang, Hai-jun Zhang, Shu-geng Wu, Guang-hai Qi, Jing Wang

TL;DR
Adding sodium sulfate to laying hens' diets improves eggshell quality and related biological processes.
Contribution
The study shows that 0.68% dietary sodium sulfate optimally enhances eggshell quality and uterine ion transport in hens.
Findings
Eggshell breaking strength and thickness improved significantly with 0.68% sodium sulfate.
Uterine ion transport and glycosaminoglycan synthesis increased with dietary sodium sulfate.
Mammillary layer structure improved in hens fed 0.68% sodium sulfate.
Abstract
This study evaluated the effects of dietary sodium sulfate (Na2SO4) supplementation on eggshell quality, uterine ion transportation, and glycosaminoglycan (GAG) synthesis. A total of 432 48-wk-old Hy-line Brown laying hens were randomly divided into 6 dietary treatments with 8 replicates of 9 birds each. The experimental laying hens were fed the corn-soybean meal diets (containing 0.15% NaCl) supplemented with 0.22%, 0.37%, 0.52%, 0.68%, 0.83%, or 0.99% Na2SO4 for 12 weeks. Results showed that the eggshell breaking strength and eggshell ratio significantly increased in the 0.68% Na2SO4 group at the end of wk 56 and wk 60 (p<0.05). In addition, eggshell thickness and weight significantly increased in the 0.68% Na2SO4 group at the end of wk 60 (p<0.05). Eggshell calcium content in the 0.68% Na2SO4 group was higher than that of 0.22% and 0.99% groups (p<0.001). The concentrations of K+…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAnimal Nutrition and Physiology
