Abstract:
Two experiments were conducted to determine the effects of a dietary non-starch polysaccharide enzyme (Easyzyme, Archer Daniels Midland Co., Decatur, IL) or phytase
(Phyzyme, Danisco Animal Nutrition, St. Louis, MO) addition in corn-soybean meal
or high-fiber diets on nursery pig growth performance. In Exp. 1, 192 nursery pigs (PIC
327 × 1050, initially 21.8 lb) were allotted to 1 of 4 dietary treatments arranged in a
2 × 2 factorial. Main effects were diet type (corn-soybean meal or corn-soybean meal
plus 30% wheat middlings) with or without added dietary enzyme (Easyzyme Mixer 1,
1 lb/ton). Each experiment involved 6 pigs per pen and 8 replications per treatment. All
diets contained 340.5 phytase units (FTU)/lb. From d 0 to 21, pigs fed corn-soybean
meal diets had greater (P < 0.001) ADG than those fed diets containing 30% wheat
midds. Added Easyzyme had no effect on ADG. ADFI and F/G exhibited a diet type ×
Easyzyme interaction (P < 0.03). In corn-soybean meal diets, Easyzyme had no effect
on ADFI or F/G, whereas in diets containing 30% wheat midds, Easyzyme increased
ADFI and worsened F/G.