Effects of dietary fibers with different fermentation characteristics on feeding motivation in adult female pigs

Souza da Silva, C; Bolhuis, JE; Gerrits, WJ; Kemp, B; van Den Borne, JJ

HERO ID

1454317

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2013

Language

English

PMID

23313406

HERO ID 1454317
In Press No
Year 2013
Title Effects of dietary fibers with different fermentation characteristics on feeding motivation in adult female pigs
Authors Souza da Silva, C; Bolhuis, JE; Gerrits, WJ; Kemp, B; van Den Borne, JJ
Journal Physiology & Behavior
Volume 110-111C
Page Numbers 148-157
Abstract Dietary fibers can be fermented in the colon, resulting in production of short-chain fatty acids (SCFA) and secretion of satiety-related peptides. Fermentation characteristics (fermentation kinetics and SCFA-profile) differ between fibers and could impact their satiating potential. We investigated the effects of fibers with varying fermentation characteristics on feeding motivation in adult female pigs. Sixteen pair-housed pigs received four diets in four periods in a Latin square design. Starch from a control (C) diet was exchanged, based on gross energy, for inulin (INU), guar gum (GG), or retrograded tapioca starch (RS), each at a low (L) and a high (H) inclusion level. This resulted in a decreased metabolizable energy intake when feeding fiber diets as compared with the C diet. According to in vitro fermentation measurements, INU is rapidly fermentable and yields relatively high amounts of propionate, GG is moderately rapidly fermentable and yields relatively high amounts of acetate, and RS is slowly fermentable and yields relatively high amounts of butyrate. Feeding motivation was assessed using behavioral tests at 1h, 3h and 7h after the morning meal, and home pen behavioral observations throughout the day. The number of wheel turns paid for a food reward in an operant test was unaffected by diet. Pigs on H-diets ran 25% slower for a food reward in a runway test than pigs on L-diets, and showed less spontaneous physical activity and less stereotypic behavior in the hours before the afternoon meal, reflecting increased interprandial satiety. Reduced feeding motivation with increasing inclusion level was most pronounced for RS, as pigs decreased speed in the runway test and tended to have a lower voluntary food intake in an ad libitum food intake test when fed RS-H. In conclusion, increasing levels of fermentable fibers in the diet seemed to enhance satiety in adult pigs, despite a reduction in metabolizable energy supply. RS was the most satiating fiber, possibly due to its slow rate of fermentation and high production of butyrate.
Doi 10.1016/j.physbeh.2013.01.006
Pmid 23313406
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English