Prevention / Control

Sustainability is what counts!

//22 Nov 2011
The global poultry industry is facing the challenge of meeting an increasing demand for healthy proteins of animal origin and to produce it in an animal friendly and sustainable manner at an affordable price. Researchers at the European Symposium on the Quality of Egg and Meat Products showed that progress is being made.

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By Wiebe van der Sluis
Globally animal production is facing many challenges to meet the expected increase in consumption of proteins of animal origin by a growing population. With this message Dr Caspar Wenk, nutrition biologist at ETH in Zürich, Switzerland gave the recent XIV European Symposium on the Quality of Eggs and Egg products and the XX European Symposium on the Quality of Poultry Meat in Leipzig an energetic kick-off.
He warned 250 researchers present, all members of the World’s Poultry Science Association from all over the world, that within the next forty years earth will have to provide milk, meat and eggs for twice as many people as today. Meanwhile the per capita consumption for these foodstuffs will increase. This expanding demand, Wenk added, must be achieved with limited resources including available land, energy, water and nutrients. The increase in production must therefore include all aspects of sustainability (human, economic and ecological).
 
To achieve these goals the main challenge in animal production according to Wenk, is an increase of the efficiency at all levels of the food chain. Basic preconditions are healthy animals that enable a high fertility, longevity and performance. The requirements of all essential nutrients must be covered according to the genetic potential of the animals.
Food industry by-products
Overfeeding with environmentally critical nutrients must be avoided, Wenk continued. “There are big differences in the energy and nutritional utilisation as well as environmental loads between animal species, of which modern poultry breeds prove to be highly efficient. But high performing animals require feed of high quality that also could be used for human consumption. Therefore a balance in the use of food between man and animals must be reconsidered again and again.”
The increase in performance of farm animals also contributes significantly to an efficient utilisation of recourses and helps, according to Wenk, to reduce the environmental load per unit product. This can mainly be explained by the fact that in fast growing birds, one unit of lean meat requires four times less energy than one unit of adipose tissue.
The use of by-products from the food industry helps for a sustainable animal production, if they are adequate for the animal species used. Hygienic and toxicological aspects as well as possible effects on food quality must be considered. Within this context no one can afford to waste billions of Euros by destroying valuable nutrients like meat and bone meal and phosphorus.
Feed additives can contribute to increased nutrient utilisation and therefore help also to cover the nutrient requirements and boost the health of animals. Wenk concluded his introductory speech by saying that with acceptable animal housing systems and the correct treatment of animal excrements a major contribution to an environmentally sound production can be achieved.
A better image for eggs
During the symposium quite a number of presentations focused on food safety, especially the safety of eggs. Dr Songül Yalçin from the paediatrics department of the Hacettepe University in Turkey told that it is time to give eggs a better image. She underlined that eggs are an excellent nutrient for young children. Supporting this opinion, French researcher Sophie Réhault-Godbert stated that eggs contain hundreds of unknown elements that may revalue egg consumption.
Yalçin stated that too many children and pregnant women suffer from micronutrient deficiencies, like vitamin A,-B, and D, iron, zinc, iodine and calcium. Under-nutrition of these micronutrients may result in maternal mortality and low birth weight. Iron deficiency in children results in cognitive impairment and anaemia in pregnancy. Yalçin therefore recommended daily egg supply as a complementary food to decrease under-nutrition in children, even more when those eggs are enriched with the most important micronutrients.

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Source: World Poultry, Vol. 27, No. 9, 2011
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