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Home Industry Update Animal Feeds & Nutrition

Invisible stressors: When unseen challenges limit performance

by Livestock & Poultry News Desk
1 month ago
in Animal Feeds & Nutrition, Editor's Pick, Industry Update, Sponsored News
0
Invisible stressors: When unseen challenges limit performance
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Modern poultry production demands more than meeting nutritional requirements, it requires managing the unseen. Birds are bred for exceptional efficiency, rapid growth, low FCRs and uniform performance. Yet, even under optimal conditions, birds face a variety of invisible stressors that quietly erode this potential. These include not only heat or crowding, but also low-grade inflammation, dietary toxins or subtle microbial imbalances.

These invisible stressors share one common pathway: the gut microbiome. As a metabolic and immunological “control center”, it influences how well birds can cope with challenges. A stable, diverse microbiome helps maintain intestinal barrier integrity, modulate immune responses and optimize digestion. When this equilibrium is disturbed e.g. by poor fiber quality, feed contaminants or inflammation, the consequences are reduced resilience, inefficient metabolism and ultimately performance loss.

Managing these hidden influences requires an integrated nutritional strategy that stabilizes the microbiome, protects the intestinal tissue and mitigates systemic stress.

Feeding the microbiome: structure meets function

The microbiota can be influenced through a wide range of dietary factors, yet the dietary fiber profile is one of the fundamental levers. Beyond its structural role, the right fiber provides fermentable substrate that drives the microbiota towards a beneficial composition that produces short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs), the essential energy source for the epithelium.

However, not all fiber types act the same. Conventional lignocellulose supports gizzard function and litter quality but has limited influence on the microbiome and hindgut fermentation. In contrast, eubiotic lignocellulose, combining structural fiber from stem wood with fermentable fractions from bark, goes further. It promotes hindgut fermentation, producing measurable shifts in the microbial community and increased SCFA production.

Microbial composition the caeca of broilers (Zeitz et al., 2018)

When toxins disrupt microbial communities

Mycotoxins are another invisible but severe threat to poultry gut health. Even at low concentrations, toxins like AFB1, OTA or T-2 disturb the microbial balance and compromise epithelial integrity, allowing opportunistic pathogens to proliferate. The resulting dysbiosis reduces nutrient digestibility and triggers secondary inflammation, further weakening the metabolism.Effective mycotoxin control therefore requires more than binding capacity alone. A multi-component approach combining adsorption, biological component that perform biotransformation, as well as ingredients that provide liver and immune system support has proven effective in minimizing the mycotoxin risk.

Inflammation as the silent thief

Chronic, low-grade inflammation does not appear overnight. It develops gradually through repeated immune activation, often secondary to mycotoxins, dietary imbalances or microbial shifts, among others. Quietly, inflammatory processes consume precious energy that is diverted away from performance. Addressing inflammation as its source is key to long-term stability.

Respiratory stress, the often-forgotten performance factor

Invisible stressors are not limited to the gut. While the gut is central to health management, the respiratory tract is one of the largest surfaces in direct contact with the environment and therefore a major interface of stress. High dust load, ammonia or temperature fluctuations can trigger oxidative stress and inflammatory responses that indirectly affect digestion and feed efficiency.One system, multiple entry points

Despite their different origins, these invisible stressors are interconnected. Mycotoxins compromise the gut lining, the inflammatory status and the dietary fiber profile shape the microbiota and respiratory stress feeds systemic oxidative load. The result is a feedback loop which drains the available energy for meat and egg production. Breaking this loop demands comprehensive support

A&P Nutrition, the newly unified brand born from the strategic alliance of PATENT CO. and agromed under the RWA (Raiffeisen Ware Austria) umbrella, is redefining the future of animal nutrition. With decades of expertise now consolidated into a single, robust portfolio. At the heart of this transformation lies a clear mission: Improving animal performance. This is more than a slogan—it’s a customer-centric promise backed by innovation, transparency, and a deep understanding of species-specific needs. Through the targeted solutions of A&P Nutrition – eubiotic lignocellulose (OPTICELL), multilayered mycotoxin control (MYCORAID), wood lignans as gut performance tool (AGROMED ROI) and respiratory support (LIQUIHYPE) – we offer an integrated approach to conquer unseen performance barriers. By focusing on the microbiome as the central link between nutrition, metabolism and resilience, poultry producers can turn invisible stress into visible, sustainable results.

For more information:- https://apnutrition.com/

Post Views: 3,283

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