Center for Advanced BioEnergy Research, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Thursday, August 16, 2012

Researchers feed pigs, chickens high-protein fungus grown on ethanol leftovers

Phys.org
August 14, 2012

Initial studies show a fungus grown in the leftovers of ethanol production could be a good energy feed for pigs and chickens.

In separate feeding trials, nursery pigs and chickens have eaten high-protein fungi that Hans van Leeuwen and other Iowa State University researchers have produced in a pilot plant that converts ethanol leftovers into food-grade fungi. The production process also cleans some of the water used to produce ethanol, boosting the amount of water that can be recycled back into biofuel production and saving energy on water cleanup and co-product recovery.

So far in the feeding trials, researchers have found pig performance wasn’t impacted when dried fungi were substituted for corn or soybean meal, said Nicholas Gabler, an assistant professor of animal science. Researchers are still studying the effects of the feed on amino acid availability, tissue growth, and intestinal health.

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1 comment:

Detert Zuchtschweine said...

O really? It seems to be a nice research. Thanks for sharing. Looking forward for more.