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Cefic - Sector Group Inorganic Feed Phosphates

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Phosphorus: a vital source of animal nutrition

Phosphorus is one of the most important minerals in animal nutrition. It is the second most abundant element in an animal’s body after calcium, with 80% of phosphorus found in the bones and teeth, with the remainder located in the body fluids and soft tissue.

Average total content of phosphorus and calcium in adult animals

 

Calcium

Phosphorus

Laying hen

(2kg)

22g

13g

Sheep

(50kg)

550g

280g

Fattening pig

(100kg)

750g

460g

Dairy cow

(600kg)

7000-9600g

3600-5000g

Sources: V.I. Georgievskii, Mineral Nutrition of Animals, Butterworths, 1982 H.J. Oslage, Zeitschrift Tierphysiologie, Tierernährung, Futtermittelkunde, 1964

Phosphorus plays a key metabolic role and has more physiological functions than any other mineral. These functions involve major metabolic processes such as:

Phosphorus requirements

An adequate supply of phosphorus, in a form that can be absorbed by the animal and is available for storage or use to support these physiological processes, is essential if optimal livestock health and productivity are to be achieved. This is often referred to as biologically “digestible” or “available” phosphorus (cf. definitions p. 17).

In addition, an animal’s phosphorus requirement cannot be looked at in isolation, since both calcium and vitamin D are closely linked with it in many of the metabolic processes. For example, accretion of phosphorus in the animal’s bones is also affected by the presence of calcium and vitamin D.

Consequently, in addition to adequate phosphorus levels, the calcium to phosphorus ratio (Ca:P), as well as suitable levels of vitamin D, are critical to balanced nutrition.

Phosphorus deficiency

Without an adequate supply of phosphorus, an animal will suffer from a phosphorus deficiency, the consequences of which are varied, but in all cases affect the animal’s physical well being, as well as its economic performance. The initial effect is a fall in blood plasma phosphate levels, followed by the response mechanism of calcium and phosphorus being withdrawn from the animal’s bones. Apart from a generally lower resistance to infection, this often results a loss of appetite and a reduction in live weight gain due to impaired feed efficiency.

Deficiency symptoms become more pronounced when conditions for animal husbandry are not ideal. For specific species, these include:

Optimum calcium: phosphorus ratios

 

Ca:P

Ca:vP

Laying hens

4.1 – 5.8

11.4 – 12.3

Broilers, chickens, pullets

1.2 – 1.5

2.2 – 2.3

Piglets, sows and fattening pigs

1.2 – 1.5

2.9 – 3.0

Dairy cow (600kg; 35kg milk/day)

1.15 – 1.4

Sources: V.I. Georgievskii, Mineral Nutrition of Animals, Butterworths 1982 Centraal Veevoeder Bureau (CVB), The Netherlands, 2004.

Phosphorus allowances

Phosphorus requirements for most animals have been well established. However, translating these into daily allowances is more complicated, taking into account a number of factors. These include:

In providing required levels of phosphorus, the primary concerns of the livestock producer are animal welfare and productivity, in order to ensure the proper development of the animal and the best economic return. In addition, environmental considerations to ensure the lowest possible environmental impact are increasingly being taken into account.