Phosphorus in phytate form is, in general, not
bioavailable to non-ruminant animals because they lack the digestive enzyme
phytase, which is required to separate phosphorus from the phytate molecule. In
most commercial agriculture, non-ruminant livestock such as swine and poultry
are fed mainly grains such as soybeans and maize.
Because phytate from these grains is unavailable for
absorption, the unabsorbed phytate passes through the gastrointestinal tract,
elevating the

amount of phosphorus in the manure. Excess phosphorus excretion can lead to
environmental problems such as eutrophication. The bioavailability of phytate
phosphorus can be increased by supplementation of the diet with the enzyme
phytase.
Better digestible
The new hulless barley (named
“Clearwater”) is rich in the kinds of phosphorus- an essential nutrient - that
pigs, fish and other monogastric animals can use. That’s unlike grain from
conventional barleys, which contains more of the phytate type of phosphorus, the
kind that monogastric animals find difficult to digest. Plant geneticists Victor
Raboy, Phil Bregitzer and others at the ARS Small Grains and Potato Germplasm
Research Unit at Aberdeen, Idaho use conventional plant-breeding procedures to
chemically tweak seeds’ phosphorus makeup. The work has paved the way for
lowphytate barleys, such as Clearwater and a hulled type called “Herald,” as
well as low-phytate rice, corn and soybeans. Bregitzer, Raboy and ARS plant
geneticist Don Obert collaborated in the Clearwater research with Idaho
Agricultural Experiment Station co-researchers Juliet Windes and James
Whitmore.
Opportunities for aquaculture
Clearwater yields are
about the same as those of other niche-market barleys, according to Bregitzer.
One such market - aquaculture feeds - is already being explored. Approximately
46,000 pounds of Clearwater were shipped to Vietnam earlier this year by the
U.S. Grains Council of Washington, D.C., and the Idaho Barley Commission to test
Clearwater as a feed ingredient for farm-raised fish. ARS researchers at
Hagerman, Idaho, and Bozeman, Mont., will soon begin similar investigations with
farm-raised rainbow trout. The Idaho Agricultural Experiment Station’s
Foundation Seed Program at Kimberly has offered Clearwater seed for sale since
late 2007.
Source: Feed Tech magazine. Volume 12.
No.6