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A note on copper sulphate in the diet of pigs

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 September 2010

G. Berek
Affiliation:
Research Institute for Animal Husbandry, Budapest, Hungary
L. Urbanyi
Affiliation:
Research Institute for Animal Husbandry, Budapest, Hungary
T. Lakatos
Affiliation:
Research Institute for Animal Husbandry, Budapest, Hungary
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Extract

Braude (1965) has recently reviewed the literature on the subject of supplementation of rations for growing pigs with copper, and concluded that as much as 0·1% copper sulphate could be added to the feed without toxic effects, and that this increased growth rate by about 8·1% and improved efficiency of feed conversion by about 5·4%. Both these values are average responses from a very large number of experiments. Similar results have been reported from the Soviet Union by Volkopjalov, Lebedjeva, Spiridonova and Matuskova (1962).

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © British Society of Animal Science 1967

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References

REFERENCES

Berek, G., Farkas, B., Feher, K., & Scherer, A., 1963. (A comparative experiment on rearing early weaned pigs.) Kiserletügyi Közlemenyek, Allattenyesztes, Budapest, Vol. LVI/B, No. 2: 3–;26.Google Scholar
Braude, R., 1965. Copper as a growth stimulant in pigs. In Cuprum pro Vita (Transactions of a Symposium). Copper Development Association, London, p. 55.Google Scholar
Volkopjalov, B. P., Lebedjeva, T. B., Spiridonova, A. G. & Matuskova, A. N., 1962. (Experíments on Supplementation of rations of growing pigs with high levels of copper.) Materialy k naučznomu obosnovaniju sistem vedenije životnovodstvo, Leningrad, 83: 4653.Google Scholar