products and energy
Energy
Digestible energy
ME and NE
Protein
100

What are the industrial co-products 

Blood

Brains

Bones and skin

Dried bones

Gall stones

hair

Meat scraps

Fatty acids and glycerol

100

What are the percentage of costs for the major nutrients

Energy - 60%

Protein - 25%

Phosphorus - 8%

Rest - 7%

100

What is digestible energy

Gross energy minus fecal energy 

100

What is metabolizable energy 

Digestible energy minus urinary and gaseous energy

100

What is crude protein

Nitrogen content x 6.25 = crude protein (average N content of proteins is 16g N/100 g protein

Referred to as crude because of the assumptions inherent in the equation - all proteins contain 16% nitrogen, all nitrogen is present in proteins

Crude protein does not equal true protein

Crude protein value is sufficiently accurate for more purposes in swine nutrition

200

What are the pharmaceutical co-products

Adrenal glands

blood

heart

intestines

pancreas

Pineal gland

pituitary

skin

thyroid

200

What are the different types of energy systems in animals

Gross energy

Digestible energy

Metabolizable energy

Net energy

200

Which of the following is/are not involved in determining DE of feeds or feed ingredients 

a) adaption of animals to feed and crates 

b) collection of feces

c) collection of urine

d) energy measurement in a bomb calorimeter

e) euthanasia of animals

C and E

200

What is the equation for ME

ME = (total energy intake - (total energy excreted + total urine energy)) / Feed intake

200

What is the difference in protein vs amino acids

Amino acids are the building blocks/monomeric units that make up proteins in animals

Pigs have requirements for amino acids, not proteins

Pigs get most of their amino acid needs from the proteins in feedstuffs they ingest, amino acids are released during digestion and absorption of proteins

300

What are the forms of energy

Mechanical, thermal, electrical, light, nuclear, chemical energy

300

What is gross energy

Maximum quantity of energy in a given sample

300

What are the methods of determining digestible energy

Total collection method

Index method

300

What are the benefits and limitations of the ME systems

The ME system is simple to use and is the current default system

Considered a reliable index of what is available to the animal for maintenance and production 

The ME does not take into account energy lost as heat increment

It does not consider energy partitioned for maintenance and production

300

What is the difference between essential vs nonessential amino acids

Essential - cannot be synthesized, or at least at a rate sufficient to permit optimum growth or reproduction. must be provided in the diet

Nonessential - can be synthesized by body cells and do not need to be provided in the diet

Conditionally essential - become essential in certain situations

400

What is the first law of thermodynamics

Energy can be neither created nor destroyed. It can only be changed from one form to another

400

What are the two equations for gross energy

1 - GE (MJ/kg) = 18.73 - 0.192 x Ash + 0.223 x ether extract + 0.065 x CP

2 - GE (Kcal/kg) = 4143 + (56 x %EE) = (15 x %CP) - (44 x %Ash)

400

What is the calculation for digestible energy

DE = (total energy intake - total fecal energy excretion) / (feed intake)

total energy intake is (feed intake x GE of feed)

400

What is net energy

Metabolizable energy minus heat increment 

400

What are the essential amino acids

Histidine, isoleucine, leucine, lysine, methionine, phenylalanine, threonine, tryptophan, valine

500

What are the sources of energy for pigs

ATP - protein, lipid, CHO

the efficiency of utilization of protein, lipid or CHO for ATP production varies 

The utilization of ATP for protein or lipid deposition is variable

500

What are the uses and limitations of gross energy

Can be used to rank or select feed ingredients

not all gross energy that is consumed will be retained by the animal

Losses in the feces and urine, and as gases and heat. Based on these losses in the process of energy utilization, different energy systems have been developed

500

What are the uses and limitations of digestible energy

Accounts for undigested energy

DE if affected by age of pigs, fiber level in the diet, feed intake and feed processing techniques 

DE does not take into account energy lost in urine and gases 

500

What do energy requirements depend on

Animal age

Gender

Productive function/phase

Parity

Expected number of piglets

Environmental/housing conditions

500

What are the non-essential amino acids

Alanine, asparagine, aspartate, glutamate, glycine, serine