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© 2002 The American Society for Nutritional Sciences J. Nutr. 132:3411-3417, November 2002


Nutritional Neurosciences

Choice Feeding of Selenium-Deficient Laying Hens Affects Diet Selection, Selenium Intake and Body Weight

Christine A. Zuberbuehler1, Ruth E. Messikommer and Caspar Wenk

Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Institute for Animal Sciences, Nutrition Biology, ETH-Zentrum, 8092 Zurich, Switzerland

1To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: christine.zuberbuehler{at}inw.agrl.ethz.ch.

Inadequate selenium (Se) supply often in combination with low vitamin E status causes deficiency symptoms in many species. It is likely that a vague discomfort or sickness is perceived before clear deficiency signs become apparent. We investigated whether Se-deficient hens reduce their Se deficit by selecting a diet containing more selenium when offered two diets with different Se concentrations. A Low-Se diet (0.07 mg Se/kg) was supplemented with Se-enriched yeast (Sel-Plex 50) to produce Medium-Se (0.20 mg Se/kg) and High-Se (1.50 mg Se/kg) diets. Each of two consecutive study parts (I and II) with the same hens and treatments began with a 6-wk baseline period (Medium-Se diet), subsequently followed a 9-wk depletion period (Low-Se diet or Medium-Se diet), then a 6-wk choice feeding period in which two diets with different Se concentrations (Low-Se and Medium-Se, Medium-Se and High-Se, or Low-Se and High-Se) were offered. A control group received the Medium-Se diet throughout the study. Daily Se intake, calculated from daily feed intake, followed similar patterns in both parts of the study, but Se-deficient hens preferred (P < 0.05) the High-Se diet to the Low-Se diet during the first 3 wk of choice feeding only in part I. We conclude that young Se-deficient laying hens reduce their Se deficit if they have a choice between a Low-Se and a High-Se diet by preferentially selecting the High-Se diet, possibly based on learned place preference and/or learned taste aversion to the Low-Se diet, presumably in response to discomfort due to Se-deficiency.


KEY WORDS: • selenium • deficiency • laying hens • choice feeding • taste aversion







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