Impact of Soybean Meal, Mustard Meal, Rapeseed Meal and Black Cumin on Production Performance, Egg Quality and Gut Microflora of Laying Hens
Md Abubakar Siddik, Mst Afroza Khatun, Sweety Rani Mondal, Shoriful Islam, Md. Azizul Haque, Khadiza Akter Brishty, Hemayet Hossain, Md. Mahfujur Rahman

TL;DR
This study found that adding mustard meal, rapeseed meal, and black cumin to laying hens' diets improved weight gain and gut health without harming egg quality.
Contribution
The study introduces mustard meal, rapeseed meal, and black cumin as effective and cost-efficient substitutes for soybean meal in layer diets.
Findings
Hens fed with mustard, rapeseed, and black cumin diets showed higher body weight gain and lower gut microflora.
Egg production and quality remained unaffected despite dietary changes.
Replacing soybean meal with these alternatives reduced egg production costs.
Abstract
This study aimed to assess the impact of diverse protein sources (soybean, mustard, rapeseed and black cumin [BC]) as dietary supplements on production performance, egg quality and gut microflora of Shaver Brown 579 commercial layers. A randomized design allocated 324 hens over 4 months into six treatments with six replications for each treatment, each replication containing 09 birds. The treatments included T0 (control diet), T1 (basal diet + soybean), T2 (basal diet + mustard), T3 (basal diet + rapeseed), T4 (basal diet + mustard + BC) and T5 (Basal diet + Rapeseed + Black cumin). Production performances were assessed monthly and egg quality characters were assessed at 44th and 52nd weeks. Hens on diets featuring mustard, rapeseed and BC exhibited significantly higher body weight gain (BWG), without substantial impact on feed intake. The highest final body weight was observed in T5,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAnimal Nutrition and Physiology · Rabbits: Nutrition, Reproduction, Health · Antioxidant Activity and Oxidative Stress
