Supplementation of poultry feeds with dietary zinc and other minerals and compounds to mitigate nitrogen emissions--a review.
Study Design
- Çalışma Türü
- Review
- Popülasyon
- None
- Müdahale
- Supplementation of poultry feeds with dietary zinc and other minerals and compounds to mitigate nitrogen emissions--a review. None
- Karşılaştırıcı
- None
- Birincil Sonuç
- growth
- Etki Yönü
- Mixed
- Yanlılık Riski
- Unclear
Abstract
One of the environmental challenges that the poultry industry has been faced with is ammonia emission from manure. One way to reduce nitrogen excretion and emissions is supplementing dietary trace minerals to inhibit the activity of microbial uricase, a key enzyme converting nitrogen compounds in the manure into ammonia. Several dietary minerals are commercially available as economic alternatives for reducing ammonia emissions in poultry. In this review, we discuss different mineral elements including zinc as feed amendment minerals that could be used to reduce ammonia emission. Issues discussed include potential for inhibiting microbial uricase, dietary supplementation levels, growth performance, toxicity, their influence on manure nitrogen emission, and potential mineral accumulation in soil. In addition, we discuss other minerals and compounds that have the potential to reduce ammonia volatilization by inhibiting microbial uricase and growth of uric acid-utilizing microorganisms.
Used In Evidence Reviews
Similar Papers
Pharmacology & therapeutics · 2005
Zinc metabolism in airway epithelium and airway inflammation: basic mechanisms and clinical targets. A review.
Endocrine, metabolic & immune disorders drug targets · 2015
Vitamins and type 2 diabetes mellitus.
British poultry science · 2015
Comparative effects of zinc-nano complexes, zinc-sulphate and zinc-methionine on performance in broiler chickens.
Journal of pediatric hematology/oncology · 2002
Excessive oral zinc supplementation.
Current opinion in clinical nutrition and metabolic care · 2009
Efficacy of vitamin supplementation in situations with wound healing disorders: results from clinical intervention studies.
Journal of dairy science · 2020