Production of single cell protein of Saccharomyces cerevisiae with broken rice and inclusion in pigs

Authors

  • Omar R. Pinzón-Fajardo Zootec, Esp, MSc; Escuela de Ciencias Animales; Facultad de Ciencias Agropecuarias y Recursos Naturales, Universidad de los Llanos, Villavicencio, Colombia
  • Víctor L. Hurtado-Nery MVZ,MSc,PhD; Escuela de Ciencias Animales; Facultad de Ciencias Agropecuarias y Recursos Naturales, Universidad de los Llanos, Villavicencio, Colombia; Grupo Nutrición Universidad de los Llanos

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.22579/20112629.653

Keywords:

anaerobic fermentation, crude protein, growth performance, nutritional value, starch, piglet

Abstract

Cereal flour protein content can be increased by microbial protein action through yeastdriven fermentation. This research was aimed at evaluating the anaerobic fermentation of liquid rice bran with Saccharomyces cerevisiae as a single cell protein (SCP) source for raising pigs. A pilot test for S. cerevisiae SCP production was carried out in the laboratory using rice bran to standardise and find the best process conditions regarding SCP production in a 600 L fermenter tank. The rice bran obtained by fermentation with S. cerevisiae was evaluated for 30 days using twenty-four 21.72±3.31 kg pigs; a randomised complete block design (RCBD) was used, involving four treatments, three blocks and six animals per treatment. The trial had four rice bran post-fermented with S. cerevisiae inclusion levels: T1 0% bran inclusion, T2 10%, T3 20% and T4 25%. Final weight (kg), average daily gain (g/day), final consumption (kg) and feed conversion ratio (FCR) were the variables evaluated here. SCP inclusion in food rose from 8.23% to 13.97%. There were significant statistical differences (p<0.05) regarding average daily gain for T1 (625.81 g/day) and T2 (618.77) compared to T3 (526.38) and T4 (542.77) and FCR for T1 (2.20) and T2 (2.16) compared to T3 (2.54) and T4 (2.45). There were no differences (p>0.05) regarding final weight or final consumption. Diet costs were lower for T2, T3 and T4. The anaerobic fermentation of rice bran improved feed protein content through S. cerevisiae growth and can be included in diets for raising pigs; it has good palatability and up to 10% SCP inclusion level, obtaining good yield and a lower cost diet.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

References

Downloads

Published

2021-06-16

Issue

Section

Agricultural sciences

How to Cite

Production of single cell protein of Saccharomyces cerevisiae with broken rice and inclusion in pigs. (2021). Orinoquia, 25(1), 23-33. https://doi.org/10.22579/20112629.653

Similar Articles

1-10 of 50

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.

Most read articles by the same author(s)