Bioavailability of Fluorine in Sepiolite for Laying Hens
Author
Publication date
1990-12-01ISSN
0032-5791
Abstract
The purpose of the present work was to compare the bioavailability of structural fluorine
contained in sepiolite and in sodium fluoride for laying hens. Three hundred 27-wk-old laying hens were fed
one of three diets: 1) a control based on corn, barley, and soybean meal containing 21 mg/kg of fluorine; 2) a
sepiolite diet in which 2% sepiolite replaced 2% barley in the control diet and which contained 217 mg/kg of
fluorine; and 3) a NaF diet, consisting of the same control diet to which NaF was added to contain 217 mg/kg
of fluorine (the same level of F~ as the sepiolite diet). The experiment ended when hens were 64 wk old.
Fluorine concentration in the tibial bone of hens fed the NaF diet was four times higher than in the control,
and twice as high in eggshell. In contrast, hens fed sepiolite had fluorine concentrations in tibial bone and
eggshell not significantly higher than fluorine concentrations in the controls. These results indicate that
fluorine from sepiolite was not available. The effects of the different diets on egg production, feed intake, feed
conversion, egg weight, shell and interior egg quality, dry matter of feces, and body weight gain were also
determined but no significant differences due to the dietary treatment were observed.
(Key words: fluorine, sepiolite, sodium fluoride, tibial bone, eggshell)
Document Type
Article
Document version
Published version
Language
English
Subject (CDU)
636 - Animal husbandry and breeding in general. Livestock rearing. Breeding of domestic animals
Pages
5
Publisher
Elsevier
Is part of
Poultry Science
Citation
Nogareda, C., J. Brufau, A. Pérez-Vendrell, E. Angulo, M. Almirall, and E. Esteve-Garcia. 1990. “Bioavailability of Fluorine in Sepiolite for Laying Hens.” Poultry Science 69 (12): 2165-2169. doi: 10.3382/ps.0692165
Program
Nutrició Animal
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- ARTICLES CIENTÍFICS [3404]
Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/


