Tropical Animal Science Journal
Vol. 44 No. 4 (2021): Tropical Animal Science Journal

Propolis Supplementation on Broiler Chicken Performances, Nutrient Digestibility, and Carcass Characteristics: A Meta-Analysis

Sadarman (Department of Animal Science, Sultan Syarif Kasim State Islamic University)
A. Irawan (Vocational School, Universitas Sebelas Maret)
C. Hidayat (Indonesian Research Institute for Animal Production)
Elfawati (Department of Animal Science, Sultan Syarif Kasim State Islamic University)
M. M. Sholikin (Graduate School of Nutrition and Feed Science, Faculty of Animal Science, IPB University)
R. P. Harahap (Animal Science Study Program, Faculty of Agriculture, Tanjungpura University)
R. K. Rusli (Department of Animal Nutrition and Feed Technology, Faculty of Animal Science, Andalas University)
R. Solfaine (Department of Pathology, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Universitas Wijaya Kusuma)
A. Sofyan (Research Division for Natural Product Technology (BPTBA), Indonesian Institute of Sciences (LIPI))
Nahrowi (Department of Nutrition and Feed Technology, Faculty of Animal Science, IPB University)
A. Jayanegara (Department of Nutrition and Feed Technology, Faculty of Animal Science, IPB University)



Article Info

Publish Date
12 Nov 2021

Abstract

This meta-analysis was conducted to investigate the effect of dietary propolis supplementation on broiler performance, carcass characteristics, and nutrient digestibility evaluated at the starter and finisher phases. An online literature search was conducted using scientific platforms of Science Direct, PubMed, and Google Scholar to identify the studies utilizing propolis as dietary supplementation in broiler chickens. A total of 39 publications comprising of 58 experiments met the inclusion criteria. A mixed model procedure for meta-analysis was performed, considering the studies as a random effect and levels of propolis as a fixed effect. Regression analysis suggested that average daily gain (ADG), body weight, and average daily feed intake (ADFI) at starter and finisher phases were quadratically affected by supplementing propolis in the diet (p<0.01). Propolis also lowered the feed conversion ratio (FCR) throughout the periods (p<0.05). In addition, a positive effect of propolis inclusion was also observed on breast meat percentage (p<0.05). However, there was a negative linear relationship between propolis and the digestibility of dry matter (DMD) and organic matter (OMD) (p<0.01) at the starter period. Conversely, there was a linear increase in DMD (p<0.05) and a tendency to improve apparent metabolizable energy (AME) and phosphorus digestibility at the finisher period (p<0.10). Overall, it can be concluded that dietary propolis supplementation promoted better growth performance and feed efficiency when given at ~1.66-2.13 g/kg diets for starter and finisher phases in the broiler chickens. The effect of propolis on nutrient digestibility was positive at the finisher phase while it was detrimental at the starter phase.

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Journal Info

Abbrev

tasj

Publisher

Subject

Agriculture, Biological Sciences & Forestry Energy

Description

ropical Animal Science Journal (Trop. Anim. Sci. J.) previously Media Peternakan is a scientific journal covering broad aspects of tropical animal sciences. Started from 2018, the title is changed from Media Peternakan in order to develop and expand the distribution as well as increase the ...