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DPS-Swine
Technical Bulletin No. 3
In a trial conducted by Dr. Dean Zimmerman at Iowa State University, baby pigs fed starter diets in which DPS 30 replaced dried whey significantly outperformed those fed a control diet.
Technical Bulletin No. 9
In a trial conducted by Dr. Dean Zimmerman at Iowa State University, young pigs on diets with DPS 30 had similar performance to those on diets with dried whey and spray dried plasma.
Technical Bulletin No. 11
In an eight week feeding trial conducted by Dr. Dean Zimmerman at Iowa State University, baby pigs fed starter diets with DPS 30 gained more weight than those on a control diet with dried whey.
Technical Bulletin No. 13
In a trial conducted by Dr. Dean Zimmerman at Iowa State University, young pigs on diets with DPS 30 had better performance than those on diets with only spray dried plasma and dried whey.
Technical Bulletin No. 16
In a slope-ratio growth pig-feeding trial conducted by Dr. Merlin Lindemann at the University of Kentucky, DPS 30 tested equivalent to plasma.
Technical Bulletin No. 17
In a trial conducted by Dr. Dean Zimmerman at Iowa State University, it was indicated that CPS 21 can be used to cost effectively replace high protein soybean meal in swine growing and finishing rations.
Technical Bulletin No. 19
In a feeding trial conducted by Dr. Merlin Lindemann at the University of Kentucky, nursery pigs fed DPS 30 had equal ADG and better feed efficiency compared to pigs fed spray dried blood cells.
Technical Bulletin No. 20
In a feeding trial conducted by Dr. Charles V. Maxwell at the University of Arkansas, the replacement potential of DPS 30 for select Menhaden fish meal and spray dried plasma protein was tested on young pigs.
Technical Bulletin No. 21
Small peptides protein increase amino acid absorption and production of pancreatic hormones. An explanation of the high performance of young pigs on diets containing DPS.
Technical Bulletin No. 23
In a preference feeding trial conducted by Dr. Merlin Lindemann at the University of Kentucky, 21 day weaned pigs preferred starter feed containing DPS 30 over starter feed with no DPS 30 by a ratio of 4-to-1.
Technical Bulletin No. 24
A preference feeding trial was conducted by Dr. Merlin Lindemann at the University of Kentucky. The trial tested weanling pigs preference for diets containing either 2.5% DPS 30 or 5.0% DPS 30.
Technical Bulletin No. 25
In a preference feeding trial conducted by Dr. Merlin Lindemann at the University of Kentucky, 20-day weaned pigs preferred a starter feed containing DPS 30 and plasma over a starter feed with plasma only.
Technical Bulletin No. 26
A preference feeding trial was conducted by Dr. Merlin Lindemann at the University of Kentucky. The trial tested weanling pigs preference for diets containing either DPS 30 or DPS 50RD.
Technical Bulletin No. 27
In a feeding trial conducted at the Cooperative Research Farms in Lexington, Illinois, DPS 30 was tested to determine its value as a pig starter ingredient. (PDF 25KB, 1 Page)
Technical Bulletin No. 29
In a feeding trial conducted by "De Schothorst" Institute for Animal Nutrition (The Netherlands) the inclusion of DPS 50RD increased feed intake and daily gain of piglets.
Technical Bulletin No. 30
In a trial conducted at Khon Khen University in Thailand, pigs fed DPS 30 as a replacement for Delac and Totalac consumed more feed, grew faster and had reduced diarrhea scores.
Technical Bulletin No. 31
A feeding trial evaluating the effects of DPS vs. other high quality proteins on young pig performance was conducted at the Agricultural University of China.
Technical Bulletin No. 32
A trial conducted by Dr. Chen Ji, at the Agricultural University of China, Beijing, demonstrated that piglets fed DPS had significantly improved gut morphology and diarrhea scores compared to piglets fed fishmeal.
Technical Bulletin No. 37
A feeding trial was conducted in 1998 by Dr. Hsia at National Pingtung University in Taiwan to examine performance of DPS 30, Plasma and Tryptophan on feed intake in low Tryptophan diets for piglets.
Technical Bulletin No. 38
The Japanese government conducted several tests to determine the digestibility and availability of nutrients in DPS for pigs.
Technical Bulletin No. 41
A feeding trial was conducted at the University of Minnesota, by Drs. Lee Johnston, Sam Baidoo and Jerry Shurson, to examine the effect of DPS on the performance of lactating sows and their litters.
Technical Bulletin No. 42
In a feeding trial conducted by a major United States feed company, pigs were fed diets containing DPS 50RD to evaluate the effects of replacing fishmeal or plasma on growth performance.
Technical Bulletin No. 43
DPS 50RD was used in a 5-week nursery trial to evaluate its effectiveness on growth performance of pigs weaned at 20 days of age. Dr. Hans Stein conducted this trial at South Dakota State University (SDSU).
Technical Bulletin No. 45
In a feeding trial conducted at Kansas State University, DPS 30, plasma and other specialty protein products were tested for nursery pig performance.
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