Abstract:
A total of 675 pigs (PIC 1050 barrows; initially 24.5 lb BW and 37 d of age) were used
in a 21-d study to determine the effects of feeding varying ingredient particle sizes and
diet form for 25- to 50-lb nursery pigs on performance, caloric efficiency, and economics.
Pens of pigs were balanced by initial BW and randomly allotted to 1 of 8 dietary
treatments with 17 replications per treatment and 5 pigs per pen in two groups of nursery
pigs. The 8 experimental diets included 3 corn-soybean meal–based diets consisting
of: (1) corn fraction ground to an average of 620 μ and fed in meal form, (2) corn
fraction ground to an average of 352 μ and fed in meal form, and (3) diet 2 but pelleted.
The remaining 5 diets were high by-product diets containing 20% wheat middlings
(midds) and 30% dried distillers grains with solubles (DDGS). Diets 4 to 8 consisted
of: (4) corn fraction ground to an average of 620 μ, midds and DDGS unground from
the plant with an average particle size of 534 μ and 701 μ, respectively, and fed in meal
form; (5) diet 4 but corn fraction ground to an average of 352 μ and fed in meal form;
(6) diet 5 but fed in pellet form; (7) corn, soybean meal, DDGS, and midds ground to
average particle sizes of 352 μ, 421 μ, 377 μ, and 357 μ, respectively, fed in meal form;
and (8) diet 7 but fed in pellet form. The two formulated diets were not balanced for
energy, so energy was lower for treatments 4 to 8 than for treatments 1 to 3.