Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where J. A. Downing is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by J. A. Downing.


British Journal of Nutrition | 2002

Dietary n-3 and n-6 fatty acids alter avian metabolism: metabolism and abdominal fat deposition

R. E. Newman; W. L. Bryden; Eva Fleck; John R. Ashes; William A. Buttemer; Leonard H Storlien; J. A. Downing

The effects of dietary saturated fatty acids and polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA) of the n-3 and n-6 series on weight gain, body composition and substrate oxidation were investigated in broiler chickens. At 3 weeks of age three groups of chickens (n 30; ten birds per group) were fed the fat-enriched experimental diets for 5 weeks. These diets were isonitrogenous, isoenergetic and contained 208 g protein/kg and 80 g edible tallow, fish oil or sunflower oil/kg; the dietary fatty acid profiles were thus dominated by saturated fatty acids, n-3 PUFA or n-6 PUFA respectively. Resting RQ was measured in five birds from each treatment group during weeks 4 and 5 of the experiment. There were no significant differences between treatments in total feed intake or final body mass. Birds fed the PUFA diets had lower RQ and significantly reduced abdominal fat pad weights (P<0.01) compared with those fed tallow. The dietary lipid profile changes resulted in significantly greater partitioning of energy into lean tissue than into fat tissue (calculated as breast lean tissue weight:abdominal fat mass) in the PUFA groups compared with the saturated fat group (P<0.01; with no difference between the n-3 and n-6 PUFA groups). In addition, the PUFA-rich diets lowered plasma concentrations of serum triacylglycerols and cholesterol. The findings indicate that dietary fatty acid profile influences nutrient partitioning in broiler chickens.


British Journal of Nutrition | 2002

Dietary n-3 and n-6 fatty acids alter avian metabolism: molecular-species composition of breast-muscle phospholipids

R. E. Newman; W. L. Bryden; Eva Fleck; John R. Ashes; Leonard H Storlien; J. A. Downing

The effects of diets high in n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA; provided by fish oil), n-6 PUFA (sunflower oil) or in more-saturated fatty acids (tallow) on the distribution of subclasses of choline phospholipids (PC) and ethanolamine phospholipids (PE) from the breast muscle of broiler chickens were examined. Supplementation with the different fatty acids had no effect on the distribution of phospholipid subclasses. Feeding sunflower oil or tallow gave a molecular-species profile similar in both fatty acid subtype and proportion. In the diacyl PC phospholipids, 16 : 0-18 : 1n-9 and 16 : 0-18 : 2n-6 accounted for approximately 60 % of the total molecular species, whereas for the alkylenyl PC the predominant species were 16 : 0-18 : 1n-9 and 16 : 0-20 : 4n-6. Of the diacyl PE the dominant species was 18 : 0-20 : 4n-6 which accounted for 50 % of the molecular species, and of the alkylenyl PE the dominant species were 16 : 0-18 : 1n-9, 16 : 0-20 : 4n-6 and 18 : 0-20 : 4n-6. Supplementation with fish oil significantly increased levels of both eicosapentaenoic acid (20 : 5n-3) and docosahexaenoic acid (22 : 6n-3) in PC and PE when compared with either sunflower oil or tallow supplementation. The increase in the n-3 PUFA incorporation was associated with a corresponding decrease in the proportion of arachidonic acid (20 : 4n-6) in both PC and PE. Different dietary fats induce different patterns of fatty acid incorporation and substitution in the sn-2 position of the diacyl and alkylenyl PC and PE of avian breast muscle, and this finding is indicative of selective acyl remodelling in these two phospholipids.


Animal Production Science | 2014

Insulin secretion, body composition and pig performance are altered by feeding pattern

R. E. Newman; J. A. Downing; Peter C. Thomson; Cherie L. Collins; D. J. Henman; S. J. Wilkinson

Three studies investigated the effect of feeding strategy on production performance and endocrine status of growing pigs. For Experiment 1, 20 entire male pigs (70.0 ± 4.6 kg) were allocated randomly to individual pens in one of four climate-controlled rooms. Pigs were fed for 23 days either ad libitum or entrained to feed bi-phasically for two 90-min periods. For Experiment 2, 20 entire male pigs (41.2 ± 3.5 kg) were housed as per Experiment 1. Pigs were fed for 49 days either ad libitum or fed bi-phasically for two 60-min periods. For Experiment 3, 100 female pigs (66.1 ± 3.5 kg) were randomly allocated to individual pens within a commercial piggery and fed for 42 days either ad libitum or bi-phasically for two 60-min periods. Ear vein catheters were inserted into 10 pigs from each group and hourly blood samples were collected for 24 h in Experiments 1 and 2 and for 11 h in Experiment 3. Plasma insulin, non-esterified fatty acid and glucose concentrations were determined in Experiments 1 and 2, and glucose and insulin concentrations in Experiment 3. Feed intake and performance were recorded in all experiments and carcass composition was assessed by computed tomography for Experiment 2. There were no differences in final liveweight between the two treatment groups for all experiments. Pigs fed for two 90-min periods (Experiment 1) showed no difference in feed intake when compared with feeding ad libitum. Pigs in Experiment 2 fed for two 60-min intervals consumed 2.49 kg/pig.day compared with those fed ad libitum that consumed 2.68 kg/day (P = 0.057). In Experiment 3, pigs fed twice daily consumed 2.82 kg/pig.day compared with 2.91 kg/pig.day in ad libitum-fed pigs (P = 0.051). Bi-phasic fed pigs in Experiment 2 had improved (P < 0.05) feed conversion efficiency compared with pigs fed ad libitum. For all experiments, there was no difference in plasma glucose concentrations between the two treatments. In all three experiments, the circulating insulin concentrations for pigs fed ad libitum remained at a constant level throughout the sampling period. However, plasma insulin concentrations for the bi-phasic fed pigs significantly increased ~1 h after both feeding periods during all three experiments. Insulin secretion of pigs fed for two 90-min periods differed from that of pigs fed for two 60-min periods. Plasma insulin concentration increased five-fold following feeding for 60 min, compared with that in pigs fed for 90 min, which increased two-fold. Bi-phasic-fed pigs from Experiment 2 had reduced (P < 0.05) total carcass fat and significantly increased muscle when compared with pigs fed ad libitum. The data showed that feeding pigs at two succinct periods aligned insulin secretion to the time of feeding. Pigs fed for 60 min, unlike those fed for 90-min intervals, had reduced feed intake in comparison to those fed ad libitum. This may suggest that the duration of the feeding bout is important for this response and this may in turn influence both energy balance and the way energy is partitioned.


Animal Production Science | 2008

Tolerance of pigs to sorghum ergot (Claviceps africana) during growth and finishing, and effect on conception of replacement gilts

J. S. Kopinski; Barry J. Blaney; J. A. Downing

Two batches of sorghum infected with ergot were incorporated into nutritionally balanced grower and finisher diets that contained 0, 5 or 10 mg alkaloid/kg (0, 4 or 8 mg dihydroergosine/kg), or 10 mg alkaloid/kg (8 mg dihydroergosine/kg) plus 1% zeolite. The contents of ergot sclerotia in the 10 mg/kg diets were ~2% in one batch and 4% in the other; the latter batch had a heavy secondary fungal infection of Cerebella sp., which tends to limit alkaloid accumulation. These diets were each fed to four male and four female pigs as they grew from 20 to 90 kg. There were no deleterious effects on growth, feed intake and conversion even with lower plasma prolactin of 0.1 µg/L in ergot-fed pigs compared with ~1 µg/L in the control pigs. Zeolite did not counteract the ergot reduction of prolactin and had no effect on performance. Male pigs were then slaughtered, but females continued to be fed the diets for a further 3 months, when they were brought into oestrus and artificially inseminated. One month after pregnancy was confirmed, they were slaughtered and fertility was assessed. There were no significant differences in the numbers of corpora lutea or embryos between pigs fed ergot and control diets.


Journal of Animal Science | 2005

The effect of active immunization against adrenocorticotropic hormone on cortisol, beta-endorphin, vocalization, and growth in pigs.

C. Lee; L.R. Giles; W. L. Bryden; J. A. Downing; D.C. Collins; Peter Wynn


Animal Production Science | 2017

Commercial evaluation of a mating in lactation protocol

R. Z. Athorn; J. A. Downing


Animal Production Science | 2015

A ‘two-stage’ farrowing and lactation system: assessing the impacts of group lactation on the incidence of lactational oestrus and reproductive performance

E. J. McDonald; R. S. Morrison; R. Z. Athorn; A. J. Norval; J. A. Downing; J. A. Lievaart


Animal Production Science | 2015

Split suckling versus intermittent suckling with primiparous sows: skip-a-heat effects on oestrus during lactation and reproductive performance

R. Z. Athorn; J. R. Craig; E. J. McDonald; J. A. Downing; P. Langendijk


Animal Production Science | 2015

Low to moderate dietary n-6:n-3 PUFA ratios do not affect performance of grower-finisher pigs

S. J. Wilkinson; B. P. Mullan; J. C. Kim; J. A. Downing


Asia Pacific Journal of Clinical Nutrition | 2008

Concurrent Session 6: Glycaemic Control: Insulin secretion and body composition are influenced by the feeding pattern.

R. E. Newman; J. A. Downing; Peter Wynn; R. Taylor; Peter C. Thomson; S.J. Wilkinson

Collaboration


Dive into the J. A. Downing's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

W. L. Bryden

University of Queensland

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Eva Fleck

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

John R. Ashes

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Barry J. Blaney

Animal Research Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

C. Lee

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge