Effects of treated walnut green husk on broiler growth performance, gut health, and meat quality
Hassan Shirzadi, Enayat Rahmatnejad, Shokoufeh Hasanvand, Yaser Khorram Del

TL;DR
This study shows that adding treated walnut green husk to broiler diets improves growth, gut health, and meat quality, with fermented husk being slightly more effective.
Contribution
The novel contribution is demonstrating the benefits of treated walnut green husk, specifically fermented and enzyme-treated forms, in broiler nutrition.
Findings
Both fermented and enzyme-treated walnut green husk improved growth performance and feed conversion in broilers.
Treated husk enhanced gut health by modulating cecal bacteria and improving jejunal morphology.
Meat quality improved with reduced fat oxidation and better water-holding capacity in treated groups.
Abstract
This study evaluated the effects of treated walnut green husk (WGH) on growth performance, cecal microflora, jejunal morphology, nutrient digestibility, blood biochemistry, and meat quality in broiler chickens. A total of 180 day-old Ross 308 broilers were assigned to three dietary treatments for a 42-day trial, with six replicates (10 birds per cage). The dietary treatments consisted of a basal diet (control), the basal diet supplemented with 2.1 g/kg fermented WGH (FWGH), and the basal diet containing 2.0 g/kg WGH plus 0.1 g/kg multi-enzyme (EWGH). Both FWGH and EWGH improved broiler growth performance during the grower, finisher, and overall periods, as indicated by enhanced feed conversion ratio and European production efficiency index, with FWGH producing marginally greater improvements. Both treatments reduced cecal total aerobic bacteria, while FWGH additionally increased…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNuts composition and effects · Animal Nutrition and Physiology · Rabbits: Nutrition, Reproduction, Health
