Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-q99xh Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-28T22:25:56.509Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Effects of dietary crude protein level on odour from pig manure

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 May 2007

P. D. Le
Affiliation:
Animal Sciences Group, Wageningen UR, PO Box 65, 8200 AB Lelystad, The Netherlands Wageningen Institute of Animal Sciences, Wageningen UR, PO Box 338, 6709 AH Wageningen, The Netherlands Department of Animal Sciences, Hue University of Agriculture and Forestry, 102 Phung Hung, Hue, Vietnam
A. J. A. Aarnink*
Affiliation:
Animal Sciences Group, Wageningen UR, PO Box 65, 8200 AB Lelystad, The Netherlands
A. W. Jongbloed
Affiliation:
Animal Sciences Group, Wageningen UR, PO Box 65, 8200 AB Lelystad, The Netherlands
C. M. C. Van der Peet-Schwering
Affiliation:
Animal Sciences Group, Wageningen UR, PO Box 65, 8200 AB Lelystad, The Netherlands
N. W. M. Ogink
Affiliation:
Animal Sciences Group, Wageningen UR, PO Box 65, 8200 AB Lelystad, The Netherlands
M. W. A. Verstegen
Affiliation:
Wageningen Institute of Animal Sciences, Wageningen UR, PO Box 338, 6709 AH Wageningen, The Netherlands

Abstract

The objective of this study was to determine the effects of dietary crude protein (CP) level on odour emission, odour intensity, hedonic tone, and ammonia emission from pig manure and on manure composition (pH, total nitrogen, ammonium, volatile fatty acids, indolic, phenolic and sulphur-containing compounds). An experiment was conducted with growing pigs (n = 18) in a randomised complete-block design with three treatments in six blocks. Treatment groups were 12%, 15% and 18% CP diets. Barley was exchanged for soya-bean meal. Crystalline amino acids (AA) were included in the 12% CP diet up to the level of pigs' requirement; the same amount of AA was added to the 15% and 18% CP diets. Pigs with an initial body weight (BW) of 36.5 ± 3.4 kg (mean ± s.d.) were individually penned in partly slatted floor pens and offered a daily feed allowance of 2.8 × maintenance requirement for net energy (NE: 293 kJ/kg BW0.75). Feed was mixed with water, 1/2.5 (w/w). Faeces and urine of each pig were accumulated together in a separate manure pit under the slatted floor. After an adaptation period of 2 weeks, the manure pits were cleaned and manure was collected. In the 5th week of the collection period, air samples for odour and ammonia analyses, and manure samples were collected directly from each manure pit. Air samples were analysed for odour concentration and for hedonic value and intensity above odour detection threshold. Manure samples were analysed for volatile fatty acids, and indolic, phenolic and sulphurous compounds, ammonium and total nitrogen concentrations. Reducing dietary CP from 18% to 12% lowered odour emission ( P < 0.05) and ammonia emission ( P = 0.01) from pig manure by 80% and 53%, respectively. Reduced dietary CP decreased total nitrogen, methyl sulphide, carbon disulphide, ethanethiol, phenol, 4-ethyl phenol, indole and 3-methyl indole concentrations in the manure ( P < 0.05). Volatile fatty acids and cresols concentrations in the manure of pigs fed different dietary CP levels were similar. A reduction of dietary CP and at the same time providing essential AA is an option to reduce odour emission as well as ammonia emission from pig manure.

Type
Full Papers
Copyright
Copyright © The Animal Consortium 2007

Introduction

Odour emission from pig production facilities causes serious nuisance in the surrounding areas, and should therefore be reduced. Odour is mainly generated by the microbial conversion of feed in the intestinal tract of pigs and by microbial conversion of pigs' excreta under anaerobic conditions in manure storages. A great number of odorous compounds have been identified from animal production facilities. O'Neill and Phillips (Reference O'Neill and Phillips1992) summarised 168 compounds in livestock wastes or in the surrounding air. Recently, Schiffman et al. (Reference Schiffman, Bennett and Raymer2001) identified a total of 331 different compounds in the air and lagoon water from pig production facilities. They can be classified into four main groups: (1) sulphurous compounds, (2) indolic and phenolic compounds, (3) volatile fatty acids (VFA), (4) ammonia and amines. Many odorous compounds are intermediate or end products of protein degradation (Mackie et al., Reference Mackie, Stroot and Varel1998; Le et al., Reference Le, Aarnink, Ogink, Becker and Verstegen2005b). Therefore, protein is an important dietary compound that could be altered to reduce odour emission.

Diets generally contain more protein than the pigs' requirement. The main reason is that the amino acids (AA) composition of dietary protein from feeds does not match the animal's requirement and thus the dietary levels are formulated to supply the minimum level of the most essential and limiting AA. This gives a surplus of other AA in the diet. Usually a large part of dietary protein and its metabolites is excreted via urine and faeces (Jongbloed and Lenis, Reference Jongbloed and Lenis1992; Van der Peet-Schwering et al., Reference Van der Peet-Schwering, Jongbloed and Aarnink1999). Reducing protein or nitrogen (N) concentration in excreta decreases the availability of substrates that microbes can metabolise to odorous compounds. It is clear from the literature that ammonia from animal production facilities can be decreased considerably by reducing the amount of protein in the diet and at the same time supplementing most essential AA to balance AA pattern and to maintain animal performance (Hobbs et al., Reference Hobbs, Pain, Kay and Lee1996; Canh et al., Reference Canh, Aarnink, Schutte, Sutton, Langhout and Verstegen1998b; Zervas and Zijlstra, Reference Zervas and Zijlstra2002; Portejoie et al., Reference Portejoie, Dourmad, Martinez and Lebreton2004). However, in the case of odour strength and offensiveness the situation is not so straightforward.

Up to now, scientists mainly focused on certain specific odorous compounds in the manure or in the odorous air, e.g. Hobbs et al. (Reference Hobbs, Pain, Kay and Lee1996) and Sutton et al. (Reference Sutton, Patterson, Adeola, Richert, Kelly, Heber, Kephart, Mumma and Bogus1998). Little attention has been given to the effect of dietary crude protein (CP) levels on odour emission measured by olfactometry. Odour measured by olfactometry is evaluated through its strength (odour concentration and odour intensity) and offensiveness (odour hedonic value). In this study we measured odour concentration according to the European standard (CEN standard 13 725, 2003). Odour intensity and odour hedonic tone was measured according to The Netherlands standard (NVN 2818, 2005). The main objective of this study was to determine the effects of dietary CP levels on odour strength, odour offensiveness, and ammonia emission from manure of growing pigs and on manure characteristics.

Material and methods

Animals, experimental design and diets

A randomised complete-block arrangement with three treatments in six blocks was used to study effects of dietary CP level on odour concentration, odour emission, odour intensity, odour hedonic tone, and ammonia emission from growing pig manure and on manure characteristics (pH, and concentrations of total N, ammonium, VFA, and indolic, phenolic and sulphurous compounds). There were three dietary CP levels: 12, 15, and 18%. Each treatment was replicated six times, one replicate in each of six blocks, of which a block consisted of samples collected on the same day and from animals with similar initial body weight (BW).

In total 18 growing barrows, Great Yorkshire × (Great Yorkshire × Dutch Landrace) with an initial BW of 36.5 ± 3.4 kg (mean ± s.d.) were randomly allocated to one of the three diets within each of the six blocks. Pigs were penned individually in galvanised steel pens (2.1 × 0.96 m) with a slatted floor at the rear (0.97 × 0.96 m). There was a separate manure pit under the slatted floor of each pen. The volume of the manure pit was 1.35 × 0.91 × 0.36 m (length × width × depth). Pigs were penned in a mechanically ventilated and temperature-controlled room. Temperature and relative humidity were recorded every 5 min. The average temperature and relative humidity of the room during the experimental period were 21.0oC ± 0.84 and 50.0% ± 5.32 (mean ± s.d.), respectively.

Three diets with dietary CP levels of 12, 15 and 18% were formulated. Barley was exchanged for soya-bean meal to increase the CP level. Diets had similar contents of net energy (NE), minerals, and vitamins but differed in CP levels by varying the amount of extracted soya-bean meal (Tables 1 and 2). Diets were supplemented with essential AA, e.g. Lys, Trp, Thr and Met. The method of supplementing AA was as follows: first, we supplemented the 12% CP diet with these mentioned AA up to the level of animal requirement based on apparently ileal AA digestibility (Centraal Veevoederbureau, 2004). Then, we supplemented 15 and 18% CP diets with the same amount of these AA as supplemented in the 12% CP diet. This was done to study solely the effect of the CP levels and prevent confounding effects with AA supplementation. Other constituents, for example, fibrous components, and dietary electrolyte balance (dEB), which could possibly affect odour production, were equalised for the same reason.

Table 1 Ingredient composition of experimental diets (g/kg as-fed basis)

The vitamin-mineral pre-mix supplied per kg feed included 7000 IU vitamin A, 1700 IU vitamin D3, 20 IU vitamin E, 1.5 mg vitamin K, 1.5 mg vitamin B1, 4 mg vitamin B2, 11 mg D-pantothenic acid, 18 mg niacin, 18 μg vitamin B12, 0.1 mg folic acid, 1.0 mg vitamin B6, 100 mg choline chloride, 75 mg Fe, 10 mg Cu, 65 mg Zn, 30 mg Mn, 0.15 mg Co, 0.75 mg I, 0.30 mg Se.

Table 2 Nutrient composition of experimental diets (as-fed basis)

Non-starch polysaccharides (NSP) were calculated as organic matter – (CP+crude fat+starch+sugar).

dEB was determined as mEq = Na+K–Cl.

§ dEBS-a was determined as mEq = Na+K–Cl–2S. dEBS-a does not take into account S present in AA.

Experimental diets were analysed for AA composition, ash, DM, CP, minerals, crude fibre, fat, starch, sugar and gross energy. The AA (except Met, Cys, and Trp) were assayed by ion-exchange column chromatography after hydrolysis for 23 h in HCl (6 mol/l). Cys and Met were determined as cysteic acid and methionine sulfone after oxidation with performic acid before hydrolysis (Schram et al., Reference Schram, Moore and Bigwood1954). Trp was determined according to Sato et al. (Reference Sato, Seino, Kobayashi, Murai and Yugari1984).

Starch content was determined enzymatically according to the amyloglucosidase/hexokinase method (NEN 3574). Sugar was assayed according to the non-starch polysaccharides (NSP) procedure (Gelder et al., Reference Gelder, van te Brinke, Cone, van Lonkhuijsen, Jetten and Lichtendonk1992). Crude fibre was determined gravimetrically after treatment with sulphuric acid and potassium hydroxide (ISO/DIS 6895). For total fat, samples were hydrolysed with chloric acid, followed by extraction of fat with petroleum ether. The Ca, P, Mg, Na, K, Cu and Zn contents were determined using the inductively coupled plasma atomic emission spectrometry (ICP-AES). The Cl content was determined by potentiometric titration of water-diluted solid samples with the chloride specific ion electrode (Jenway Chloride Meter, model PCLM3). For sulphate, samples were extracted with chloric acid. Sulphate was separated with ion chromatography using a water/sodium hydroxide gradient and an Ionpac AS 11 (Dionex) as column. Detection takes place by suppressed electric conductivity. Identification and quantification occur using an external standard solution. The DM was determined gravimetrically after 4 h at 103°C (ISO 6496). The content of ash was determined gravimetrically after ashing at 550°C (ISO 5984). Nitrogen content was determined by the Kjeldahl method (ISO 5983). The analysed dietary CP levels of 12% CP, 15% CP and 18% CP on an as-fed basis were 12.3, 14.2 and 18.0%, respectively (Table 2).

Pigs were fed 2.8 times the maintenance NE requirement (293 kJ/kg BW0.75). Water was restrictedly provided by mixing feed with water in the ratio of 1/2.5 (w/w). Apart from water with feed no additional water was given to the pigs. So it was aimed to have the same amount of feed and water intake by the pigs to excrete almost a similar amount of manure. Pigs were fed two times per day at 0800 h and 1500 h. The amount of feed provided was adjusted each day according to the expected BW gain of 750 g/day. Feed intake was recorded every day. Pigs were weighed at the beginning and at the end of the experimental period just before the morning feeding. Daily weight gain and feed efficiency were obtained from the feed intake and the increase in BW during the experimental period.

After an adaptation period of 2 weeks to allow pigs to acclimatise to the experimental diets, pens and manure pits were cleaned. Subsequently, faeces and urine were accumulated together in the manure pit. In the 5th week of the collection period, air samples for odour and ammonia measurements and manure samples were collected for subsequent analyses.

Air sample collection and measurement of odour concentration, odour hedonic tone and odour intensity

Collection of air samples for odour measurement

Air samples were used to measure odour concentration, odour hedonic tone and odour intensity. Air samples were collected directly from air above the manure in the pit. A schematic view of the air sampling set up is shown in Figure 1. In the 5th week of the collection period at about 1000 h each day, a vessel without a bottom was placed in the middle of the manure pit. The bottom of the vessel touched the bottom of the manure pit. The net surface of the vessel was 595 cm2; and the diameter was 28 cm. The vessel was divided into two compartments by a lid. The net height of the lower compartment was 40 cm and the net height of the upper compartment was 20 cm. On each day, we collected air samples from one block. The experiment had six blocks. Each block consisted of one sample from 12% CP treatment, one sample from 15% CP treatment and one sample from 18% CP treatment.

Figure 1 Schematic view of the odour and ammonia sample collection (1 = odour free air pressurised cylinder, 2 = manure pit, 3 = vessel, 4 = impingers, 5 = critical glass capillary, 6 = rigid container, 7 = odour bag, 8 = vacuum pump).

Air entering the upper compartment of the vessel from a pressurised cylinder was odour-free air. Air entered the lower compartment of the vessel via 24 holes of 1-mm diameter each, located at the edge of the lid. Air was exhausted from the vessel by a hole of 5 mm diameter in the middle of the lid.

The outgoing odour air from the vessel was split into two streams. One stream was used to collect the odour sample. It was connected to an odour-sampling bag placed in a rigid container. This container was connected to a critical glass capillary, which had a flow rate of 0.5 l/min, and then to a vacuum pump. The other stream was used to collect ammonia and was connected to two connected impingers. The outgoing air from the impinger was connected to a critical glass capillary, which had a flow rate of 0.5 l/min, and then to the vacuum pump.

Air samples for odour measurement were collected according to the European standard with the sampling method for delayed olfactometry (CEN standard 13 725, 2003). A 40-l Nalophaan odour sampling bag was placed in a rigid container. The sample bag had been flushed with compressed and odourless air three times before it was placed in a rigid container for collection of the odour sample. The sample bag was used once for each odour sample as recommended by European standard (CEN standard 13 725, 2003). The air was removed from the container by the vacuum pump. The lower pressure in the container caused the bag to fill with a volume of sample air equal to the volume removed from the container (Figure 1). The duration of air sampling for odour was about 80 min.

One air sample for odour measurement was collected from each manure pit. During transport and storage, air samples were kept at a temperature above the dew point of the sample to avoid condensation. This was achieved by warming the rigid container of the odour bag to about 4oC above the ambient temperature. The interval between sampling and measuring odour concentration did not exceed 30 h, as recommended by European standard (CEN standard 13 725, 2003).

Measuring odour concentration

Odour concentration was measured by olfactometry according to the European standard (CEN standard 13 725, 2003) as described in detail by Le et al. (Reference Le, Aarnink, Ogink and Verstegen2005a). Odour concentrations of the examined samples were expressed in European odour units per cubic metre of air (ouE/m3). One odour unit is defined as the amount of odour-causing gases which, when diluted in 1 m3 of air, can just be distinguished from clean air by 50% of the members of an odour panel.

Odour emission was defined as the number of odour units emitted from a manure surface in 1 s and it was obtained by multiplying the ventilation rate with the corresponding odour concentration (equation 1).

(1)
E_{odour} = (C_{odour}\times V\times 10\,000)/(60\times 1000\times 595)

where Eodour = odour emission per second per m2 (ouE/s per m2), Codour = odour concentration (ouE/m3), and V = ventilation rate (l/min), 10 000 = cm2/m2, 60 = s/min, 1000 = l/m3, and 595 = the cm2 surface area of the manure pit.

Measuring odour hedonic tone and odour intensity

Hedonic tone (H) is used to evaluate the odour offensiveness, which is a measure of the unpleasantness or pleasantness of the perceived odour above the odour detection threshold. Odour intensity (I) refers to the magnitude of the odour sensation and is a measure of the intensiveness of the odour above the odour detection threshold. Odour intensity and hedonic tone were measured at the same time by olfactometry and were determined by the same panel members as for odour concentration. A minimum of four qualified panellists, according to the standard, but generally six were involved in the measurements. The measurements of H and I of each air sample were repeated twice. We used The Netherlands standard (NVN 2818, 2005) to measure odour hedonic tone and odour intensity. The principle of the measurement is to vary the odour concentration and thus to vary hedonic value and intensity. The odour concentration varied randomly in five dilution factors above the detection threshold, with steps of a factor 2, in the range from the dilution at the threshold to 32-fold less diluted air. The five dilution factors above the detection threshold were randomly given to the panellists. The consequence of the former standard procedure is that the five dilutions were different between samples and between treatments, because they had different dilutions at the detection threshold. At each presentation, each panellist was asked to indicate the perceived hedonic value, using a nine-point hedonic scale ranging from − 4, extremely unpleasant or offensive through 0, neither pleasant nor unpleasant or neutral odour to+4, extremely pleasant. The panellist was also asked to indicate the perceived odour intensity using a seven-point intensity scale ranging from 1, no odour through 2, very faint odour to 7, overwhelming odour. For each odour sample, the hedonic tone and the odour intensity at each odour concentration level above the detection threshold were calculated as the average of the hedonic tone and the odour intensity perceived by all panellists, and plotted against the logarithm of the odour concentration. From the regression lines obtained, the odour concentration at H = − 1 (mildly unpleasant), H = − 2 (moderately unpleasant), I = 1 (no odour), I = 2 (very faint odour), I = 4 (distinct odour) were derived. The former procedure is the standard reporting method as given in The Netherlands standard (NVN 2818, 2005). Regression lines of the hedonic tone and the odour intensity were also plotted against the logarithm of the odour concentration for all samples in the same treatment.

Measuring and calculating ammonia emission

Samples for determining ammonia emission were collected at the same time as odour samples. Figure 1 gives a schematic view of the ammonia emission measurement and collection procedure. Ammonia in the outgoing air was removed by passing through two impingers (ammonia trap), each containing about 20 ml 0.5 mol/l HNO3 solution. The system was run for about 90 min. The ammonia concentration and the volume of the liquid were determined in the first and the second impingers. Ammonia emission per time unit and surface unit was calculated with equation 2.

(2)
M_{NH3} = (C_{NH3}\times V\times 10\,000)/(T\times 60\times 595)

where MNH3 = mass of ammonia emitted (mg/s per m2), CNH3 = concentration of ammonia in HNO3 solution (mg/ml HNO3), V = volume of HNO3 solution (ml), 10 000 = cm2/m2, T = sampling time (min), 60 = s/min, and 595 = the surface area of the manure pit (cm2).

Collecting and analysing manure samples

Manure samples were analysed to evaluate the effect of the diets on manure characteristics. Analyses included dry matter (DM), ash, total N, ammonium-N, pH, VFA (acetic, propionic, butyric, pentanoic, iso-butyric, iso-pentanoic, hexanoic, and heptanoic acid), indolic (indole and 3-methyl indole) and phenolic compounds (phenol, 4-ethyl phenol, and cresols), and sulphurous compounds (carbon disulphide, methyl sulphide, methyl disulphide, and ethanethiol). Immediately after collecting odour samples, manure in each manure pit was mixed thoroughly before a sample of about 1 kg was collected. Manure samples were stored at − 20°C until analysis.

Ammonium was determined spectrophotometrically according to NEN 6472 (Derikx et al., Reference Derikx, Willers and Ten Have1994). VFA were measured using a Packard 427 gas chromatograph, equipped with a flame ionisation detector. Manure pH was measured by a pH electrode. For determination of indolic and phenolic compounds and sulphurous compounds, 2.5 g fresh manure was extracted with 15 ml 50% methanol for 2 h. The sample was centrifuged and the supernatant was analysed by high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). The HPLC conditions were a water-methanol gradient as elution solution and Alltima C18 (Alltech) as column. Detection was by UV absorption at 200 nm. For identification and quantification, an external standard solution was used.

Statistical analysis

The effect of dietary CP levels on daily gain, daily feed intake, feed efficiency, odour emission, odour hedonic value, odour intensity, ammonia emission, and manure characteristics were analysed using anova procedure for a randomised complete-block design. Each treatment was replicated six times (six pigs per treatment), one replicate in each of six blocks. A block consisted of samples collected on the same day and with animals with similar initial BW. The individual pig, with the manure pit, was the experimental unit. The analysing model was as following:

y _{ ij } = \mu  + \rho _{ j } + \alpha _{ i } +  e _{ ij }

where y ij = dependent variables; μ = overall mean; ρj = effect of block, j = 1–6; α = effect of diet, i = 1, 2, 3; e ij = experimental error.

Data were presented as either arithmetic or geometric mean. A natural log transformation was applied to odour emission, concentrations of VFA, total N and ammonium, indolic and phenolic, and sulphurous compounds since they were skewed and not normally distributed.

In each treatment, odour hedonic tone and odour intensity were plotted against the natural logarithm of odour concentration; and odour hedonic tone was plotted against odour intensity. The differences between slopes and between intercepts were tested to decide whether there should be separate regression lines for treatments or a common line for all treatments. The relationship between ammonia emission and odour emission was determined by linear regression. Analyses were computed using GenStat statistical package, seventh version (GenStat VSN International Ltd, 2004).

Results

Effects of dietary CP level on daily gain, daily feed intake and feed efficiency

Results showed no effects of the protein levels on average daily feed intake, daily gain, and feed efficiency (P>0.05), although feed efficiency tended to be improved for the highest CP level (Table 3).

Table 3 Effects of dietary crude protein (CP) level on daily gain, feed intake and feed efficiency

s.e. = standard errors of the means with 10 d.f. for error.

Approaching significance (P = 0.052).

Effects of the dietary CP level on odour strength and offensiveness

Descriptive statistics and analysis of variance of effects of the dietary CP levels on odour strength and offensiveness from pig manure are given in Tables 4 and 5, respectively. Geometric means of odour concentration and odour emission from pig manure were highest for the 18% CP treatment, 31 888 ouE/m3 and 4.46 ouE/s per m2, respectively and lowest for the 12% CP treatment 7259 ouE/m3 and 1.03 ouE/s per m2, respectively.

Table 4 Odour concentration, odour emission and odour concentration at different levels of hedonic tone (H) and at different levels of intensity (I) of air above manure of growing pigs fed different dietary crude protein (CP) levels (n=18) (geometric mean (GM) and arithmetic mean (AM) are given)

Table 5 Effects of the dietary crude protein levels on odour concentration, odour emission and odour concentration at different levels of hedonic tone (H) and at different levels of intensity (I) of air above manure of growing pigs fed different dietary crude protein (CP) levels (n=18)

a,b Means within rows without a common superscript letter are different at P < 0.05.

s.e. = standard errors of the means with 10 d.f. for error.

Natural logarithm.

Analyses of variance show that the dietary CP level affected both odour concentration and odour emission from pig manure (P < 0.05) (Table 5). The 18% CP treatment had a higher odour concentration and odour emission than the 12% CP treatment (P < 0.05). The 15% CP treatment had intermediate results, but did not differ from 12% CP treatment nor from 18% CP treatment (P>0.05).

The odour concentration of the air from manure of pigs fed different dietary CP levels was different at different levels of odour hedonic tone measured above the odour detection threshold (P < 0.05). At H = − 1, odour concentration of manure of pigs fed the 18% CP diet was lower than that of the other two diets (P < 0.01), while it was similar for the other two diets. At H = − 2, there were no differences in odour concentration for pigs fed either the 12% CP or 18% CP diet, while it was higher for pigs fed the 15% CP diet (P < 0.05). The odour concentrations were similar for the different treatments with respect to odour intensity at different levels (Table 5).

Relationships between odour concentration and hedonic tone, between odour concentration and intensity, and between intensity and hedonic tone are shown in Figures 2, 3 and 4, respectively. Both intercept and slope of the relationship between hedonic tone and odour concentration were different among treatments (P < 0.05). Only the intercepts of the relationship between hedonic tone and intensity and between intensity and odour concentration were different among treatments (P < 0.05).

Figure 2 Hedonic tone (H) as a function of odour concentration with regression lines, H12%CP = − 0.09 (0.16) – 1.11 (0.08) ln (odour concentration), indicated by ___ ♦; H15%CP = 0.18 (0.18) – 0.95 (0.07) ln (odour concentration), indicated by ……■; H18%CP = − 0.87 (0.18) − 0.75 (0.07) ln (odour concentration), indicated by __ __▲, R 2 = 78.3%.

Figure 3 Odour intensity (I) as a function of odour concentration with regression lines, I12%CP = 1.95 (0.13)+1.13 (0.05) ln (odour concentration), indicated by ___ ♦; I15%CP = 1.40 (0.14)+1.13 (0.05) ln (odour concentration), indicated by ……■; I18%CP = 1.83 (0.15)+1.13 (0.05) ln (odour concentration), indicated by __ __▲, R 2 = 77.5%.

Figure 4 Hedonic tone (H) as a function of odour intensity (I) with regression lines, H12%CP = 1.03 (0.09) – 0.79 (0.02) I, indicated by ___ ♦; H15%CP = 1.13 (0.09) – 0.79 (0.02) I, indicated by ……■; H18%CP = 0.91 (0.10) – 0.79 (0.02) I, indicated by __ __▲, R 2 = 91.8%.

Effects of dietary CP level on manure characteristics and ammonia emission

Tables 6 and 7, respectively, show the descriptive statistics and the analyses of variance of the effects of different dietary CP level on manure characteristics including VFA, indolic and phenolic and sulphurous compounds, total N and ammonium concentrations, pH and ammonia emission. Reduced dietary CP levels decreased total N, methyl sulphide, carbon disulphide, ethanethiol, phenol, indole, 3-methyl indole, and 4-ethyl phenol concentrations (P < 0.05), pH (P < 0.01) and ammonia emission from pig manure (P = 0.01). Reduced dietary CP levels caused a tendency to decrease ammonium concentration in pig manure (P = 0.07).

Table 6 Descriptive statistics (mean with s.d. in parentheses) of manure characteristics and ammonia emission from manure of pigs fed different dietary crude protein (CP) levels (n=18)

Total VFA = acetic acid+propinoic acid+butyric acid+iso-butyric acid+iso-pentanoic acid.

Table 7 Effects of dietary crude protein (CP) levels on manure characteristics and ammonia emission, only significant effects ( P<0.05) are presented

a,b,c Means within rows without a common superscript letter are different at P < 0.05.

Standard errors of the means with 10 d.f. for error.

Natural logarithm.

§ Approaching significance (P < 0.1).

Dietary CP levels did not influence cresols, and total and individual VFA concentrations in pig manure. Although branched-chain VFA concentrations in pig manure: iso-butyric, iso-pentanoic acids were reduced by decreasing dietary CP levels, they were not statistically different, P = 0.08 and P = 0.1, respectively. Methyl disulphide, hexanoic, heptanoic and pentanoic acids were not detected in the manure of the different treatments. The detection limits of methyl disulphide and the three VFA are 0.5 mg/kg and 0.1 g/kg, respectively. The correlation between ammonia and odour emission was 0.1.

Discussion

Diet is the first step in the odour production chain from feed to manure. It is generally accepted that dietary alterations can significantly reduce odour from pig manure (Le et al., Reference Le, Aarnink, Ogink, Becker and Verstegen2005b). Dietary protein is one of the most important precursors for odour production thus it is expected that odour produced from pig manure will be reduced as dietary CP level decreases (Mackie et al., Reference Mackie, Stroot and Varel1998; Sutton et al., Reference Sutton, Kephart, Verstegen, Canh and Hobbs1999). In this study, when dietary CP was reduced from 18% to 12% odour concentration and emission decreased by nearly 80%, or from 4.46 to 1.03 ouE/s per m2 of the manure pit. Hayes et al. (Reference Hayes, Leek, Curran, Dodd, Carton, Beattie and O'Doherty2004) found that odour emission reduced by 31% and 33%, by decreasing dietary CP content from 19% to 16% and from 19% to 13%, respectively. The odour emission rates were 19.6, 13.2, and 12.1 ouE/s per finishing pig, respectively for the 19%, 16%, and 13% CP diets. Obrock et al. (Reference Obrock, Miller and Lewis1997), however, found no difference in odour concentration between finishing pigs fed 13% and 9% CP with AA supplemented diets. Possibly, the protein levels in the study of Obrock et al. (Reference Obrock, Miller and Lewis1997) were so low that they did not cause any difference in odour concentration from pig manure.

Protein is the precursor for the production of different odorous compounds in the gut of animals and in the manure (Le et al., Reference Le, Aarnink, Ogink, Becker and Verstegen2005b). In our study reduced dietary CP levels decreased the concentrations of indolic and phenolic compounds (phenol, indole, 3-methyl indole and 4-ethyl phenol) and sulphurous compounds (methyl sulphide, carbon disulphide, ethanethiol) in the manure.

When sufficient NSP are available, microbes will use NSP as an energy source and protein or AA as a nitrogen source for their biomass synthesis. This process produces fewer odours than when protein is used as an energy source. If the amount of NSP is relatively low compared with that of protein, the microbes will use protein or AA as an energy source. This situation with insufficient NSP may create more odour than when adequate NSP is available (Gibson and Roberfroid, Reference Gibson and Roberfroid1995; Reid and Hillman, Reference Reid and Hillman1999). It is important to notice that the three diets had rather low and similar NSP levels. The increased CP levels resulted in higher ratios between fermentable protein and NSP in the gut of animals and in the manure. This can cause more protein or AA to be used by microbes as an energy source resulting in a higher concentration of odorous compounds in the gut of animals and in the manure.

The diets with 15% and 18% CP were supplemented with the same amount of crystalline Lys, Met, Trp and Thr as the diet with 12% CP. Normally in practice 15% and 18% CP diets are supplemented with less AA. This was done to prevent confounding effects between dietary CP levels and AA supplementation. Le et al. (Reference Le, Aarnink, Jongbloed, van de Peet-Schwering, Verstegen and Ogink2007) found that especially the level of crystalline sulphur containing AA in the diet affects odour emission from pig manure. Within this study the sulphur containing AA Met was added to the diets. The amount of Met added to the diet was 1.5 g/kg diet that occupied about 36%, 31% and 25% of total sulphur containing AA in 12% CP, 15% CP and 18% CP diets, respectively. When all diets were supplemented with the same amount of crystalline AA, effects of reduced CP content might be a bit less.

So far, only limited research has been conducted on the impact of dietary CP reduction on odorous compounds in manure, for examples, indolic, phenolic, and sulphurous metabolites. There is hardly any research that correlates the impact of dietary CP reduction on odour strength and offensiveness of the air above the manure or on the excretion of odorous compounds in manure or on the emission of these compounds from the manure (Le et al., Reference Le, Aarnink, Ogink, Becker and Verstegen2005b). Previous studies have shown a reduction of phenol, 4-ethyl phenol, indole, 3-methyl indole concentrations in pig manure (Hobbs et al., Reference Hobbs, Pain, Kay and Lee1996) as dietary CP levels were reduced from approximately 20 to 13%. However, no measurements on odour strength and offensiveness were conducted in these studies. Sutton et al. (Reference Sutton, Patterson, Adeola, Richert, Kelly, Heber, Kephart, Mumma and Bogus1998) reported a reduction of sulphurous compounds (carbon disulphide, dimethyl sulphide, dimethyl disulphide) as dietary CP level was reduced from 13% to 8%. The reduction of these odorous compounds is supposed to decrease odour strength and offensiveness from pig manure. This interpretation should, however, be handled with care, because the relationships between the concentration of a single odorous compound or a group of odorous compounds in manure and/or in the odorous air and the odour strength and offensiveness of the odorous air measured by olfactometry are not yet fully clear (Le et al., Reference Le, Aarnink, Ogink, Becker and Verstegen2005b). In addition, odour is a complex mixture of many compounds, so the number of compounds analysed in our experiment or in those of others are probably too few to give a general picture of odour strength and offensiveness measured by olfactometry. It could also be that we did not measure the main odorous compounds that determine the odour threshold.

According to Canh et al. (Reference Canh, Sutton, Aarnink, Verstegen, Schrama and Bakker1998c) fermentable NSP are the most important dietary components determining VFA concentration in the manure. The VFA pool was largely dominated by the short straight–chain VFA such as acetic, propionic and butyric acids which comprised 91% of total VFA in the manure confirming the results of Otto et al. (Reference Otto, Yokoyama, Von Bermuth, Van Kempen and Trottier2003) and Le et al. (Reference Le, Aarnink, Ogink and Verstegen2005a). Branched-chain VFA are only produced from protein metabolism. That could be the reason for the increase of iso-butyric and iso-pentanoic acid concentrations in the manure as dietary CP levels increased from 12% to 18%, although they were not statistically different (P = 0.08 and P = 0.1, respectively).

The main objective of this study was to determine the effect of dietary CP levels on odour strength and offensiveness, but ammonia emission was considered as well because it is a serious environmental problem. Odour abatements are only of interest if they do not increase other environmental problems as ammonia. Ammonia emission (mg/s per m2) was decreased by 53% as dietary CP levels were reduced from 18.0% to 12.2% (analysed CP values). This corresponds to about 9.2% ammonia emission reduction for each 1% unit reduction in dietary CP combined with AA supplementation. This figure is very similar to the 10% that was reported by Canh et al. (Reference Canh, Aarnink, Schutte, Sutton, Langhout and Verstegen1998b), Kay and Lee (Reference Kay, Lee, Voermans and Monteny1997), and Sutton et al. (Reference Sutton, Kephart, Patterson, Mumma, Kelly, Bous, Don, Jones, Heber, Voermans and Monteny1997). Ammonia emission is largely influenced by ammonium concentration, pH and temperature (Aarnink and Elzing, Reference Aarnink and Elzing1998). In this experiment, temperature was controlled and the same for all treatments so the effect of temperature was excluded. Ammonia emission reduction seems to have mainly resulted from lowering manure ammonium concentration and pH. Lowering dietary CP level from 18.0% to 12.2% resulted in a decrease of the ammonium concentration in the manure by 33.2% and a decrease of manure pH by 0.73 unit.

In practice diets with a low CP level generally have a low dEB, as well, because in these diets the concentration of K is generally lower. From research of Canh et al. (Reference Canh, Aarnink, Mroz, Jongbloed, Schrama and Verstegen1998a) it is known that a lower dEB means a lower pH of urine and manure and a lower ammonia emission from the manure. In our study the dEB levels were equalised to solely study the effect of CP. Therefore, with practical diets the effect of a low CP level on ammonia emission could be more pronounced than found in this study. The effect of dEB on odour emission is unknown.

So far, almost all odour studies have focused on concentration and emission of odour and odorous compounds. The odour concentration limits the question of ‘how strong and unpleasant an odour is’ to a detection threshold and the original odour is characterised in odour units or multiples of the odour concentration at detection threshold. However, this approach has a limitation in comparing different types of odours, because odour concentration does not take into account the other characteristics of odour such as the pleasantness or unpleasantness of odour (Power and Stafford, Reference Power and Stafford2001). Obviously not all odours are similar in their ability to cause annoyance. In our study, not only odour concentration, but also hedonic tone and intensity were measured. The latter two criteria can answer the question how strong and unpleasant an odour is. By using dynamic olfactometry to determine odour concentration and then odour intensity and odour hedonic tone, suitable relationships between them can be determined, allowing different odour types to be compared. The use of odour concentration, odour hedonic tone and odour intensity can give an overall comparison between odours.

A higher odour concentration at H = − 1 (mildly unpleasant) of odorous air from manure of pigs fed lower CP diets implies that pigs fed the 12% CP or 15% CP diets produced a less offensive odour from the manure, at the same odour concentration, than the 18% CP diet. A higher odour concentration at H = − 2 (moderately unpleasant) of the 15% CP treatment implies that for this hedonic tone level this odour was less offensive than of the 18% CP and 12% CP treatments. The effect of dietary CP levels on odour concentration at different levels of odour intensity was not significant, in other words air from the different treatments with a similar odour concentration had a similar level of odour intensity.

This study showed a very low correlation between ammonia and odour emission (0.1). It can be explained by the fact that odour is a complex mixture of various compounds such as sulphur-containing compounds, indolic and phenolic compounds, VFA, and ammonia and volatile amines, while ammonia is a single compound. In addition, ammonia is not a very offensive odour (Oldenburg, Reference Oldenburg1989). This result implies that ammonia emission may contribute minimally to odour emission, and strategies that have been demonstrated to be successful in reducing ammonia emission may not have a similar impact on odour. In literature inconsistent results were found with respect to the correlation between ammonia and odour emissions. Schulte et al. (Reference Schulte, Kottwitz, Gilbertson and Converse1985) and Miner (Reference Miner1995) found a high correlation between these emissions from pig production facilities. On the other hand Williams (Reference Williams1984), Oldenburg (Reference Oldenburg1989), Liu et al. (Reference Liu, Bundy, Hoff, Colins and Boon1993) and Verdoes and Ogink (Reference Verdoes, Ogink, Voermans and Monteny1997) found only a low correlation for pig production facilities. The inconsistencies in the relationship between ammonia and odour emission likely comes from the fact that ammonia and odour samples were collected from different farms and at different times. Farms are different in animal types, housing design, and dietary composition, especially the level and type of fermentable carbohydrates may vary a lot among diets. Different times of sample collection imply different environmental factors. These farms and environmental factors play key roles in influencing odour and ammonia emission (Le et al., Reference Le, Aarnink, Ogink and Verstegen2005a and Reference Le, Aarnink, Ogink, Becker and Verstegenb) and consequently the relationship between them. In our study, these sources of variances were prevented, because we collected odour and ammonia samples from the manure of the different treatments in the same animal house, at the same time, and with the same airflow rate.

Implications

This study demonstrates that feeding a diet that more closely meets the protein/AA requirement of the pigs reduced odour concentration, odour emission, odour offensiveness and ammonia emission from pig manure. This can be achieved by reducing the CP content of the diet and supplementing the diet with essential AA. The results of this study were obtained under rather controlled conditions, therefore, they should be validated in a conventional pig facility, measuring not only odour from manure, but from other sources in the animal house, as well.

References

Aarnink, AJA and Elzing, A 1998. Dynamic model for ammonia volatilization in housing with partially slatted floors, for fattening pigs. Livestock Production Science 53, 153-169.Google Scholar
Canh, TT, Aarnink, AJA, Mroz, Z, Jongbloed, AW, Schrama, JW and Verstegen, MWA 1998a. Influences of electrolyte balance and acidifying calcium salts in the diet of growing-finishing pigs on urinary pH, slurry pH and ammonia volatilisation from slurry. Livestock Production Science 56, 1-13.Google Scholar
Canh, TT, Aarnink, AJA, Schutte, JB, Sutton, A, Langhout, DJ and Verstegen, MWA 1998b. Dietary protein affects nitrogen excretion and ammonia emission from slurry of growing-finishing pigs. Livestock Production Science 56, 181-191.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Canh, TT, Sutton, AL, Aarnink, AJA, Verstegen, MWA, Schrama, JW and Bakker, GCM 1998c. Dietary carbohydrates alter faecal composition and pH and ammonia emission from slurry of growing pigs. Journal of Animal Science 76, 1887-1895.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
CEN standard 13725 2003. Air quality – determination of odour concentration by dynamic olfactometry. European Committee for Standardization, Brussels, Belgium..Google Scholar
Centraal Veevoederbureau (Animal feed product board) 2004. Tabellenboek Veevoeding (Feed table) 2004. 8203 AD Lelystad, The Netherlands..Google Scholar
Derikx, PJL, Willers, HC and Ten Have, PJW 1994. Effect of pH on behaviour of volatile compounds in organic manures during dry-matter determination. Bioresource Technology 49, 41-45.Google Scholar
Gelder, AH, van te Brinke, EM, Cone, JW, van Lonkhuijsen, HJ, Jetten, JM and Lichtendonk, WJ 1992. Protocol voor de analyse van niet-zetmeel koolhydraten (Protocol for analysing non-starch polysaccharides). Kwaliteitsreeks nr. 19. Productschap voor Veevoeder, The Hague, The Netherlands..Google Scholar
GenStat 2004. Genstat user's guide, seventh version. VSN International Ltd, Oxford, UK.Google Scholar
Gibson, GR and Roberfroid, MB 1995. Dietary modulation of the human colonic microbiota: introducing the concept of prebiotics. The Journal of Nutrition 125, 1401-1412.Google Scholar
Hayes, ET, Leek, ABG, Curran, TP, Dodd, VA, Carton, OT, Beattie, VE and O'Doherty, JV 2004. The influence of diet crude protein level on odour and ammonia emissions from finishing pig houses. Bioresource Technology 91, 309-315.Google Scholar
Hobbs, JP, Pain, BF, Kay, RM and Lee, PA 1996. Reduction of odorous compounds in fresh pig slurry by dietary control of crude protein. Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture 74, 508-514.Google Scholar
Jongbloed, AW and Lenis, NP 1992. Alternation of nutrition as a means to reduce environmental pollution by pigs. Livestock Production Science 31, 75-94.Google Scholar
Kay, RM and Lee, PA 1997. Ammonia emission from pig buildings and characteristics of slurry produced by pigs offered low crude protein diets. In International symposium on ammonia and odour control from animal production facilities (ed. Voermans, JAM and Monteny, GJ), pp. 253-259. NVTL, Rosmalen, The Netherlands.Google Scholar
Le, PD, Aarnink, AJA, Ogink, NWM and Verstegen, MWA 2005a. Effects of environmental factors on odor emission from pig manure. Transactions of the American Society of Agricultural Engineers 48, 757-765.Google Scholar
Le, PD, Aarnink, AJA, Ogink, NWM, Becker, PM and Verstegen, MWA 2005b. Odour from animal production facilities: its relation to diet. Nutrition Research Reviews 18, 3-30.Google Scholar
Le, PD, Aarnink, AJA, Jongbloed, AW, van de Peet-Schwering, CMC, Verstegen, MWA and Ogink, NWM 2007. Effects of amino acid supplementation to the diet on odor from pig manure. Journal of Animal Science 85, 791-801..CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Liu, Q, Bundy, DS and Hoff, SJ 1993. Utilizing ammonia concentrations as an odour threshold indicator for swine facilities. In Fourth international symposium on livestock environment (ed. Colins, C and Boon, C), pp. 678-685. American Society of Agricultural Engineers, Michigan, USA.Google Scholar
Mackie, RI, Stroot, PG and Varel, VH 1998. Biochemical identification and biological origin of key odour components in livestock waste. Journal of Animal Science 76, 1331-1342.Google Scholar
Miner, JR 1995. A review of the literature on the nature and control of odors from pork production facilities. National Pork Producer Council, Des Moines, IA, USA..Google Scholar
NVN 2818 2005. Geurkwaliteit – Sensorische bepaling van de hedonische waarde van een geur met een olfactometer. Netherlands Standarization Institute, Delft, The Netherlands.Google Scholar
O'Neill, DH and Phillips, VRA 1992. A review of the control of odour nuisance from livestock buildings: Part 3: Properties of the odorous substances which have been identified in livestock wastes or in the air around them. Journal of Agricultural Engineering Research 53, 23-50.Google Scholar
Obrock, HC, Miller, PS and Lewis, AJ 1997. The Effect of reducing dietary crude protein concentration on odour in swine facilities. Nebraska Swine Report. University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Lincoln, NB, pp. 14-16.Google Scholar
Oldenburg, J 1989. Geruchs- und Ammoniak- Emissionen aus der Tierhaltung (Gas and ammonia emissions from animal production). KTBL-Schrift 333. Kuratorium für Technik und Bauwesen in der Landwirtschaft e.V., Darmstadt, Germany..Google Scholar
Otto, ER, Yokoyama, M, Von Bermuth, RD, Van Kempen, T and Trottier, NL 2003. Ammonia, volatile fatty acids, phenolics and odour offensiveness in manure from growing pigs fed diets reduced in protein concentration. Journal of Animal Science 81, 1754-1763.Google Scholar
Portejoie, S, Dourmad, JY, Martinez, J and Lebreton, Y 2004. Effect of lowering dietary crude protein on nitrogen excretion, manure composition and ammonia emission from fattening pigs. Livestock Production Science 91, 45-55.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Power, V and Stafford, T 2001. Odour impacts and odour emission control measures for intensive agriculture. Final report. R&D report series no. 14. Environmental Protection Agency, Wexford, Ireland.Google Scholar
Reid, CA and Hillman, K 1999. The effects of retrogradation and amylose/amylopectin ratio of starches on carbohydrate fermentation and microbial populations in the porcine colon. Animal Science 68, 503-510.Google Scholar
Sato, H, Seino, T, Kobayashi, T, Murai, A and Yugari, Y 1984. Determination of tryptophan content of feed and feedstuffs by ion exchange liquid chromatography. Agricultural and Biological Chemistry 48, 2961-2969.Google Scholar
Schiffman, SS, Bennett, JL and Raymer, JH 2001. Quantification of odors and odorants from swine operations in North Carolina. Agricultural and Forest Meteorology 108, 213-240.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schram, E, Moore, S and Bigwood, EW 1954. Chromatographic determination of cystine as cystic acid. Biochemical Journal 57, 33-37.Google Scholar
Schulte, DD, Kottwitz, DA and Gilbertson, CB 1985. Nitrogen content of scraped swine manure. In Fifth international symposium on agricultural waste (ed. Converse, JC), pp. 321-328. American Society of Agricultural Engineers, St. Joseph, MI, USA.Google Scholar
Sutton, AL, Kephart, KB, Patterson, JA, Mumma, R, Kelly, DT, Bous, E, Don, BS, Jones, DD and Heber, AJ 1997. Dietary manipulation to reduce ammonia and odorous compounds in excreta and anaerobic manure storage. In International symposium on ammonia and odour control from animal production facilities (ed. Voermans, JAM and Monteny, GJ), pp. 245-252. NVTL, Rosmalen, The Netherlands.Google Scholar
Sutton, AL, Patterson, JA, Adeola, OL, Richert, BA, Kelly, DT, Heber, AJ, Kephart, KB, Mumma, R and Bogus, E 1998. Reducing sulfur-containing odours through diet manipulation. Proceedings of the animal production systems and the environment: an international conference on odor, water quality, nutrient management and socioeconomic issues, Iowa State University, Des Moines, IA, pp. 125–130..Google Scholar
Sutton, AL, Kephart, KB, Verstegen, MWA, Canh, TT and Hobbs, PJ 1999. Potential for reduction of odorous compounds in swine manure through diet modification. Journal of Animal Science 77, 430-439.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Van der Peet-Schwering, CMC, Jongbloed, AW and Aarnink, AJA 1999. Nitrogen and phosphorus consumption, utilisation and losses in pig production. Livestock Production Science 58, 213-224.Google Scholar
Verdoes, N and Ogink, NWM 1997. Odour emission from pig houses with low ammonia emission. In International symposium on ammonia and odour control from pig production facilities (ed. Voermans, JAM and Monteny, GJ), pp. 252-317. NVTL, Rosmalen, The Netherlands.Google Scholar
Williams, AG 1984. Indicators of piggery slurry odour offensiveness. Agricultural Waste 10, 15-36.Google Scholar
Zervas, S and Zijlstra, RT 2002. Effects of dietary protein and oathull fiber on nitrogen excretion patterns and postprandial plasma urea profiles in grower pigs. Journal of Animal Science 80, 3238-3246.Google Scholar
Figure 0

Table 1 Ingredient composition of experimental diets (g/kg as-fed basis)

Figure 1

Table 2 Nutrient composition of experimental diets (as-fed basis)

Figure 2

Figure 1 Schematic view of the odour and ammonia sample collection (1 = odour free air pressurised cylinder, 2 = manure pit, 3 = vessel, 4 = impingers, 5 = critical glass capillary, 6 = rigid container, 7 = odour bag, 8 = vacuum pump).

Figure 3

Table 3 Effects of dietary crude protein (CP) level on daily gain, feed intake and feed efficiency

Figure 4

Table 4 Odour concentration, odour emission and odour concentration at different levels of hedonic tone (H) and at different levels of intensity (I) of air above manure of growing pigs fed different dietary crude protein (CP) levels (n=18) (geometric mean (GM) and arithmetic mean (AM) are given)

Figure 5

Table 5 Effects of the dietary crude protein levels on odour concentration, odour emission and odour concentration at different levels of hedonic tone (H) and at different levels of intensity (I) of air above manure of growing pigs fed different dietary crude protein (CP) levels (n=18)

Figure 6

Figure 2 Hedonic tone (H) as a function of odour concentration with regression lines, H12%CP = − 0.09 (0.16) – 1.11 (0.08) ln (odour concentration), indicated by ___ ♦; H15%CP = 0.18 (0.18) – 0.95 (0.07) ln (odour concentration), indicated by ……■; H18%CP = − 0.87 (0.18) − 0.75 (0.07) ln (odour concentration), indicated by __ __▲, R2 = 78.3%.

Figure 7

Figure 3 Odour intensity (I) as a function of odour concentration with regression lines, I12%CP = 1.95 (0.13)+1.13 (0.05) ln (odour concentration), indicated by ___ ♦; I15%CP = 1.40 (0.14)+1.13 (0.05) ln (odour concentration), indicated by ……■; I18%CP = 1.83 (0.15)+1.13 (0.05) ln (odour concentration), indicated by __ __▲, R2 = 77.5%.

Figure 8

Figure 4 Hedonic tone (H) as a function of odour intensity (I) with regression lines, H12%CP = 1.03 (0.09) – 0.79 (0.02) I, indicated by ___ ♦; H15%CP = 1.13 (0.09) – 0.79 (0.02) I, indicated by ……■; H18%CP = 0.91 (0.10) – 0.79 (0.02) I, indicated by __ __▲, R2 = 91.8%.

Figure 9

Table 6 Descriptive statistics (mean with s.d. in parentheses) of manure characteristics and ammonia emission from manure of pigs fed different dietary crude protein (CP) levels (n=18)

Figure 10

Table 7 Effects of dietary crude protein (CP) levels on manure characteristics and ammonia emission, only significant effects ( P<0.05) are presented