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Processing Feed Ingredients from Blends of Soybean Meal, Whole Blood, and Red Blood Cells
Transactions of the ASAE
  • Linfeng Wang, Kansas State University
  • Rolando A. Flores, Kansas State University
  • Lawrence A. Johnson, Iowa State University
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2-1-1997
DOI
10.13031/2013.21288
Abstract

Fish meal is a high quality, but expensive and scarce, feed ingredient used in fish and poultry feeds. Blood meal, a slaughterhouse by-product, and soybean meal are high quality protein sources successfully used to partially replace fish meal in animal diets; however, the dehydration cost for blood meal makes it as expensive as fish meal. In this study, feed ingredients were developed using soybean meal and pork blood. Whole blood and red blood cells were mixed with soybean meal and processed under different conditions. The methods evaluated were mixing and then drying at temperatures of 50, 70, 90, and 110°C for 2 h, and mixing and then extrusion with additional blood added during extrusion. When the mixtures were dried at more than 70°C, their protein digestibility decreased significantly (p<0.05). Protein digestibilities decreased as the initial moisture content of extruded mixtures and the extruder barrel temperature increased. All the processing conditions produced microbiologically safe products.

Comments

This article is from Transactions of ASAE 40(3) 1997: 691-697. doi: 10.13031/2013.21288. Posted with permission.

Copyright Owner
American Society of Agricultural Engineers
Language
en
File Format
application/pdf
Citation Information
Linfeng Wang, Rolando A. Flores and Lawrence A. Johnson. "Processing Feed Ingredients from Blends of Soybean Meal, Whole Blood, and Red Blood Cells" Transactions of the ASAE Vol. 40 Iss. 3 (1997) p. 691 - 697
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/lawrence_johnson/49/