T. Veldkamp
Wageningen University and Research Centre
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Featured researches published by T. Veldkamp.
Poultry Science | 2010
M.M. van Krimpen; T. Veldkamp; G.P. Binnendijk; R. de Veer
An experiment was performed to investigate the effect of animal vs. vegetable protein sources in the diet of laying hens on the development of hen performance. A diet containing protein sources of only vegetable origin was compared with 4 diets, each containing 1 of 4 processed animal proteins (PAP). Two PAP (Daka-58 and Sonac-60) were classified as meat meals, and the remaining 2 (Daka-40 and Sonac-50) were classified as meat and bone meals. First, fecal digestibility of nutrients in the PAP was determined in Lohmann Brown layers. Hens (n = 132) were housed in 22 cages (6 hens/cage) and allotted to 5 dietary treatments. In the PAP diets (4 replicates/treatment), 100 g/kg of CP of animal origin was added, replacing soybean meal and corn (Zea mays) in the basal diet (6 replicates/treatment). The PAP sources differed largely in chemical composition and digestibility coefficients. Energy content (AME(n)) varied from 1,817 (Daka-40) to 3,107 kcal/kg (Sonac-60), and digestible lysine varied from 15.4 (Daka-40) to 28.3 g/kg (Sonac-50). Subsequently, the effect of a control diet (without PAP) vs. 4 PAP diets (50 g/kg of CP of animal origin from the same batches as used in the digestibility study) on performance was determined. All diets were isocaloric (AME(n) = 2,825 kcal/kg) and isonitrogenous (digestible lysine = 6.8 g/kg). Hens were housed in 40 floor pens (12 hens/pen, 8 pens/treatment) from 20 to 40 wk of age. Feed intake levels of the hens fed the meat and bone meal diets were reduced compared with those of hens fed the meat meal diets, whereas the feed intake level of hens fed the control diet was intermediate. Laying hen performance differed between treatments, being was most favorable for the Sonac-50 treatment and most adverse for the Daka-40 treatment. Differences in laying hen performance seemed to be related partly to differences in feed intake and corresponding amino acid intake.
Animal Frontiers | 2015
T. Veldkamp; Guido Bosch
Animal Feed Science and Technology | 2016
Hamideh Hashemipour; V. Khaksar; Luis A. Rubio; T. Veldkamp; M.M. van Krimpen
Applied Animal Behaviour Science | 2011
Marinus van Krimpen; T. Veldkamp; Gisabeth Binnendijk; Remco de Veer
Proceedings of the 19th European Symposium on Poultry Nutrition | 2013
I.C. de Jong; T. Veldkamp; J. van Harn
Proceedings of the 19th European Symposium on Poultry Nutrition, Potsdam, Germany, 26-29 August 2013 | 2013
A.F.B. van der Poel; M.M. van Krimpen; T. Veldkamp; R.P. Kwakkel
Archive | 2012
T. Veldkamp; G. van Duinkerken; A. van Huis; Catriona M.M. Lakemond; E. Ottevanger; G. Bosch; T. van Boekel
Archive | 2017
T.G.C.M. van Niekerk; T. Veldkamp
Archive | 2016
M.M. van Krimpen; A.F.B. van der Poel; T. Veldkamp
Archive | 2016
T. Veldkamp; J.W. van Riel; R.A. Dekker; S. Khalaji; V. Khaksar; Hamideh Hashemipour; M.M. van Krimpen; M.C. Blok